Opioid & Stimulants Initiative Resource Library
Organizations & Special Topics
An assortment of resources follows, including organizations and key topics of interest, with more to come.
General
- Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA)
- National Institute on Drug Abuse
- National Institutes of Health
- Centers for Disease Control
- U.S. Department of Justice
- U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration
- Florida Department of Children & Families
Drug Courts
- National Drug Court Institute
- National Association of Drug Court Professionals
- Florida Association of Drug Court Professionals
- Office of Justice
Overdose Prevention
Treatment Providers
- National Association of Addiction Treatment Providers
- Florida Behavioral Health Association
- Florida Alcohol & Drug Abuse Association
Other Organizations
- American Association for the Treatment of Opioid Dependence
- Addiction Policy Forum
- SMART Recovery
- Narcotics Anonymous (NA)
- Medication-Assisted Recovery Anonymous (MARA)
Fentanyl
- Drug Facts (NIDA)
- Safety Training (FDLE)
- Fentanyl Trafficking
- Illegal Use of Fentanyl
- Drug Enforcement (DEA Miami)
- Fentanyl Analogues
Prescription Drug Abuse
- Symptoms, causes, treatment (Mayo Clinic)
- Sources, effects, warnings (WebMD)
- Misuse prevention (NIDA)
- Abuse, addiction, treatment
Criminal Justice
Drugs & Substance Abuse in the Criminal Justice System
Stimulant Use Disorder Patients
U.S. Food & Drug Administration - The Voice of the Patient Report: Stimulant Use Disorder
A variety of other resources appear throughout the pages of this site for the Florida Opioids & Stimulants Response. Others are being added on an ongoing basis.
Fact Sheets
Following are downloadable Fact Sheets that can be used for educational purposes about Opioids, Opioid Use Disorder and Medication-Assisted Treatment.
Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT)
Court Considerations Regarding MAT
Learn more about Medications for Substance Use Disorders, including Medications for Opioid Use Disorder (MOUD), on the SAMHSA website.
The Opioid Crisis and How Family Court Judges Can Respond
The following article by former Justice Pariente from October 2018 remains timely today.
By: Barbara J. Pariente, Florida Supreme Court Justice
Every day, misuse and addiction to opioids causes deaths and destroys families. In the judicial system, the effects of addiction on families are well known. When I attended the opening of the 2018 Florida Legislature, Senate President Joe Negron, Speaker of the House Richard Corcoran, and Governor Rick Scott all spoke about the urgency of addressing the opioid crisis. Because this affects all Floridians and Florida’s families, significant resources may be budgeted in this legislative session.
Whether in family court, a problem-solving court, or while hearing any court docket, we must address the addictions that destroy lives of families. In family court, the impact of opioid addiction is most visible in the dependency docket, in many cases overwhelming our foster care system. We see babies born addicted to opioids and families torn apart by addiction. Our Early Childhood Courts could not be more important than now.
The impact of opioid misuse and addiction also affects domestic violence, dissolution of marriage, delinquency cases, and of course criminal cases as well as all of our problem-solving courts from veterans courts to adult and juvenile drug court to mental health courts.
Several months ago, the Conference of Chief Justices and the Conference of State Court Administrators called for the establishment of a national judicial task force to make recommendations on how the courts can address the opioid epidemic. You can read more about this important initiative below but we in the court system cannot wait.
What can we do, as members of the Florida judiciary? Are there actions we can take now to address opioids and families in court?
Below are practices we can set in motion, in the areas of judicial education, leadership, and decision-making. These are largely adapted from the recommendations of the National Council for Juvenile and Family Court Judges and align with existing family court initiatives. I have also included a list of actions for chief judges and trial court administrators.
Judicial Education (request, seek out, and receive training):
- Understand psychopharmacology, addiction, and substance abuse treatment.
- Learn the purpose of medically-assisted treatment for opioids and best practices.
- Know the ramifications of opioid treatment on the Adoption and Safe Families Act and reunification timelines.
- Gain knowledge about adolescent development and the impact of substance abuse on the adolescent brain.
- Understand the importance of early brain development and the impact of substance abuse on the developing brain during the first years of life.
Judicial Leadership:
- Create a trauma-responsive court environment.
- Identify gaps in services and needed funding to support necessary resources and services.
- Provide leadership to interrupt the illegal distribution pipeline for prescription opioids.
- Advocate for prevention strategies with youth in school or community settings.
- Advocate for substance abuse treatment.
- Convene or participate in a community response team to include medical professionals and local public health departments.
Judicial Decision-Making:
- As always, coordinate all related cases involving one family to ensure that judicial decision-making is based on comprehensive, complete information about a family.
- Read case documents with a trauma lens and use trauma-responsive court practices from the bench to ensure the gathering of necessary information to make good decisions.
- With training and an understanding of opioid addiction and treatment, make determinations regarding the best interests of the child in child abuse and neglect proceedings.
- With training and an understanding of opioid addiction and treatment, interrupt the substance abuse cycle in young people who appear before you in court.
- Refer opioid users to appropriate substance abuse treatment and ensure treatment completion.
- Hold treatment providers accountable for using evidence-based treatment models.
Chief Judges and Trial Court Administrators
- Analyze circuit data regarding filing trends and opioid-related cases (if available), and consider reallocating judicial officers and court staff to dockets handling individuals impacted by the opioid epidemic.
- Support, initiate, and expand diversion options for people with substance use disorders.
- Encourage interest among judges to sustain and expand local family court problem-solving courts.
- Encourage more judges to get basic training on substance use disorders and the history of trauma within this population to better understand the needs of individuals with these disorders.