Congress: Keep Naloxone Funding in Place
The CDC’s new overdose data is in — and for once, it’s good news.
In 2024, drug overdose deaths dropped by 24%, falling from 114,000 in 2023 to 87,000 — the lowest since 2020. That’s something worth celebrating. But it’s not the finish line. Our goal is simple: an America where no one dies from an overdose.
A key reason for this progress? Naloxone (Narcan) — the life-saving medication that can reverse opioid overdoses within minutes. It’s now widely available to the public and has become a crucial tool for first responders, who are often the first on the scene when someone’s life hangs in the balance.
But now, President Trump wants to reverse that progress. His proposed budget cuts $40 billion from the Department of Health and Human Services — including a $56 million grant that helps train and equip first responders with naloxone.
That grant amounts to just 0.0014% of the overall cut — a mere 7/5,000 of a percent. Yet it could save tens of thousands of lives.
Canceling it would be reckless. Public health experts warn that overdose deaths could rebound to 2023 levels — or worse , and indeed would go against Trump’s own campaign goal of addressing the opioid crisis head on. It simply makes no sense, but the result could be deadly.Â
This isn’t just about numbers. It’s about our loved ones — family, friends, and neighbors struggling with substance use. They are not line items. They are human lives.
Urge your Congressperson to tell the Trump Administration: Don’t put dollars over lives. Keep naloxone funding in place. Sign the petition now.