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Can $18 billion in opioid settlement funds turn an overdose tide? Ask North Carolina.

America’s opioid crisis has been ravaging the nation for decades, costing states millions of dollars in resources and claiming tens of thousands of lives each year.

But is the tide about to turn? Over the next 18 years, local, state, and tribal governments will receive $18 billion – money from legal settlements with opioid manufacturers and distributors – to be spent on abating America’s opioid epidemic. It could be a defining tool in nationwide efforts to reduce opioid-related deaths – if funds are spent wisely.

Why We Wrote This

To address America’s opioid crisis, health care experts recommend a priority on preventing fatal overdoses in the short term while helping people become sober over time. Money from legal settlements may allow states to do just that.

While these settlements might be lifesaving, they’re not unprecedented.

North Carolina, for example, a state that negotiated the tobacco Master Settlement Agreement in 1998, required tobacco companies to pay billions of dollars annually to curb tobacco addiction. Although cigarette use has declined, the MSA is broadly considered a failure: The state used the money to plug budget holes.

Now the state with the 12th-highest rate of opioid deaths, North Carolina is hoping to avoid mistakes. National experts are cautiously optimistic.

It’s “a once-in-a-generation opportunity to change the arc of this crisis,” says Brandon Marshall, professor of epidemiology at the Brown University School of Public Health. “We have to get it right.”

The opioid crisis has been ravaging the United States for decades, costing states millions of dollars in resources and claiming tens of thousands of lives each year.

But is the tide about to turn? Over the next 18 years, local, state, and tribal governments will receive a total of $18 billion to be spent on abating America’s opioid epidemic. The funds, divided among jurisdictions, are the product of legal settlements with opioid manufacturers and distributors.

The money could be a defining tool in nationwide efforts to reduce opioid-related deaths – if funds are spent wisely.

Why We Wrote This

To address America’s opioid crisis, health care experts recommend a priority on preventing fatal overdoses in the short term while helping people become sober over time. Money from legal settlements may allow states to do just that.

Sapience won the hard way

While these settlements are potentially lifesaving, they’re not unprecedented. But the precedent – a settlement with tobacco companies in the late 1990s – is more cautionary tale than road map for policymakers across the U.S., particularly in North Carolina.

The Tar Heel State was one of 46 states that negotiated the tobacco Master Settlement Agreement in 1998, which required tobacco companies to pay states billions of dollars annually to help curb tobacco addiction, particularly among youth. But while the funds have been disbursed and cigarette use has declined, the MSA is broadly considered a failure.

With no settlement language requiring states to spend the funds on reducing tobacco addiction, they began using the money to plug budget holes or meet other needs. In North Carolina, the heart of America’s tobacco industry and now the state with the 12th-highest rate of opioid deaths, local leaders are hoping to avoid those mistakes with the new opioid settlement funds. 

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