Recent News

Baltimore City Health Commissioner Issues Statement in Response to Increase in Overdose Deaths in Baltimore City

BALTIMORE, Md. (December 29, 2016)— Today, Baltimore City Health Commissioner Dr. Leana Wen issued the following statement in response to new data showing an increase in fatal overdoses statewide. Preliminary data show that there were 481 fatal overdoses in Baltimore City from January through September 2016, compared to 286 during the same time period last year. The number of people who died from overdoses relating to fentanyl has increased from 75 to 267—an 18-fold increase since 2013.

BCHD Hosts Open Meetings of Work Group on Drug Treatment Access & Neighborhood Relations

Over the past two weeks, BCHD hosted a series of open meetings of the Work Group on Drug Treatment Access and Neighborhood Relations. The sessions included panel discussions with hospital and university leaders as well as national and local policy experts, including Mayor Catherine E. Pugh, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Mental Health and Substance Use Kana Enomoto, and Deputy Director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse Dr. Wilson Compton.

Why Opioid-Related Deaths Continue To Rise And What Can Be Done To Reverse The Trend (Diane Rehm Show)

According to the CDC, opioid-related deaths surpassed 30,000 last year for the first time in history. Diane and a panel of guests discuss why the numbers continue to rise, and what public health officials, doctors and advocates say needs to happen to reverse this alarming trend.

Guests

  • Dr. Thomas Frieden director, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
  • Lenny Bernstein health reporter, The Washington Post
  • Gary Mendell founder, chairman, CEO, Shatterproof, an advocacy group dedicated to reducing addiction in the United States
  • Dr. Leana Wen Baltimore City Health Commissioner; emergency physician

Listen to the full audio.

Baltimore City Health Department Provides Update on Facebook Post Concerning Potential Food Violation

BALTIMORE, MD (December 21, 2016)On Tuesday December 20th, the Baltimore City Health Department was alerted to a Facebook post claiming to identify a skinned anim

Baltimore City Health Department Hosts Public Meeting of the Work Group on Drug Treatment Access and Neighborhood Relations

BALTIMORE, Md. (December 20, 2016)—The Baltimore City Health Department (BCHD) today heard testimony from community members and national policy leaders during an open meeting of the Work Group on Drug Treatment Access and Neighborhood Relations. The session included panel discussions with hospital and university leaders as well as national and local policy experts, including Mayor Catherine E. Pugh, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Mental Health and Substance Use Kana Enomoto, and Deputy Director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse Dr. Wilson Compton.

Baltimore City Health Department Hosts Healthy Baltimore 2020 Community Conversation on Aging

BALTIMORE, Md. (December 19, 2016)—The Baltimore City Health Department (BCHD) today hosted the latest Healthy Baltimore 2020 Community Conversation, a town hall meeting offering residents the opportunity to provide public comment on Healthy Baltimore 2020—BCHD’s recently released strategic blueprint for health and wellness through the lens of health equity.

This Immigrant Doctor Is Reimagining Health in the American City (Take Part)

“See, son, since the day you was born, you was judged.” Tyesha Harrell read from a notebook to several dozen people crowded into a purple-painted back room of the Safe Kids Zone in West Baltimore. Her voice cracked with emotion. “But Mommy got you. Mommy got you. And I will try my best to teach you how to be a man. I will not always hold your hand, but I promise you will be a man.”

The poem’s subject, one-year-old Tymond, wiggled away from his aunt, pushing his way through a sea of knees. He toddled past students from a troubled high school and their mentors, health officials, community activists, a member of Congress, and Baltimore Health Commissioner Leana Wen, whose department had organized the gathering.

As his big brown eyes peered around the room, Tymond was the very embodiment of pure potential. But as his mother knows all too well, the odds are stacked against him. He is an African American boy growing up in Sandtown-Wincester, the impoverished neighborhood where Freddie Gray lived until his fatal 2015 encounter with police. The average life span here is 70, about the same as in North Korea, while residents of wealthier neighborhoods nearby can expect another two decades of life. People here suffer more; they are more likely than residents of wealthier neighborhoods to be born prematurely, develop lead poisoning or asthma, have a baby as a teen, struggle with addiction, or become a victim of violence.

Harrell, an organizer with an advocacy group for public housing residents, and the others had gathered in the Safe Kids Zone, an after-school drop-in center about two blocks from the epicenter of the unrest that arose after Gray’s death. They had come to celebrate a grant that they hoped would lift some of the barriers that hold back children here. Wen had secured $5 million in federal funds to help three West Baltimore communities recover from trauma. Unlike most grants, a board of community members would decide how to spend the money.

Read the entire story.

Health Commissioner Dr. Leana Wen Declares First Code Blue Alert of the Winter Season

BALTIMORE, Md. (December 14, 2016)—With temperatures predicted to fall into single-digits with wind chill, Baltimore City Health Commissioner Dr. Leana Wen today issued a Code Blue declaration for Baltimore City overnight Wednesday until noon Friday. This is the first Code Blue alert for Baltimore this season.

A health wish list for the president-elect

President-elect Trump, I oversee health in Baltimore, a city where Democrats have a nine-to-one majority. I agree with you: our healthcare system is broken. 

Despite spending more than any other country, we continue to rank poorly on basic measures of health and well-being. Fifty-six countries have a lower infant mortality rate than we do. Fifty-two have a higher average life expectancy. We are paying more for less, and Americans are suffering the consequences.

Read the entire story.

Dr. Wen Joins Bipartisan Panel at the National Summit to End Lead Poisoning

Dr Wen at National Summit for Lead Poisoning Prevention Dec 2016

Earlier this week, Dr. Wen joined federal officials, physicians, patient advocates, policy experts, and public health leaders, including U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development  Secretary Julian Castro New York Times Best Selling Author Wes Moore,  and Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha of the Hurley Medical Center for the National Summit to End Lead Poisoning in Washington, DC, convened by the Green & Healthy Homes InitiativeHealthy Babies Bright FuturesIcahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, and the National Center for Healthy Housing.

During a panel, titled “Engaging Communities, Building on Common Ground,” Dr. Wen joined Ben Jealous, Partner at Kapor Capital and former national President of the NAACP; Former Maryland Governor Robert Ehrlich, Jr.; Eylssa Koidin Schmier, Senior Campaign Director at MomsRising; and Michael Bodaken, President of the National Housing Trust, to discuss how leaders across sectors can work together to end the scourge of lead poisoning in America.

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