The weekly federal-spending brief. One email a Sunday. Free. No tracking.
The BuildoutBeta
Awards/PROJECT GRANT (B)

$75,418,204

Department of Health and Human Services·Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration

to HEALTH SERVICES KENTUCKY CABINET FOR

healthactive
ACTION DATE2026-03-20·SOURCEUSASPENDING·SOURCE IDASST_NON_H79TI087770_075
Award description

KENTUCKY OVERDOSE RESPONSE EFFORT - THE KENTUCKY OVERDOSE RESPONSE EFFORT (KORE) SUPPORTS THE IMPLEMENTATION OF A COMPREHENSIVE RESPONSE TO KENTUCKY'S OPIOID AND STIMULANT CRISIS BY EXPANDING ACCESS TO EVIDENCE-BASED PREVENTION, TREATMENT, AND RECOVERY SUPPORT SERVICES. CENTRAL TO KORE’S APPROACH IS A BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SYSTEM INFRASTRUCTURE WITH THE CAPACITY TO DELIVER HIGH-QUALITY, EVIDENCE-BASED INTERVENTIONS IN A DATA-DRIVEN, EQUITABLE, AND TRAUMA-INFORMED MANNER. ADDRESSING THE EVOLVING AND EXPANDING EPIDEMIC IS A TOP PRIORITY ACROSS ALL LEVELS OF GOVERNMENT AND COMMUNITY PARTNERS IN KENTUCKY. OPIOID AND STIMULANT OVERDOSE REMAINS ONE OF THE MOST CRITICAL PUBLIC HEALTH AND SAFETY ISSUES FACING THE COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY. ALTHOUGH OVERDOSE DEATHS DECREASED BY 9.8% FROM 2022 TO 2023-A REDUCTION THAT WAS THREE TIMES THE NATIONAL AVERAGE—1,984 KENTUCKIANS DIED FROM A DRUG OVERDOSE, AND MOST OF THESE FATALITIES INVOLVED FENTANYL (79%) AND METHAMPHETAMINE (55%). INFORMED BY KORE’S STRATEGIC ACTION PLAN, POPULATIONS OF FOCUS INCLUDE INDIVIDUALS WITH OPIOID USE DISORDER (OUD) OR STIMULANT USE DISORDER (STIMUD) WHO ARE 1) OVERDOSE SURVIVORS; 2) CRIMINAL-LEGAL SYSTEM-INVOLVED; 3) PREGNANT AND POSTPARTUM; 4) BLACK, INDIGENOUS, AND PEOPLE OF COLOR (BIPOC); AND 5) TRANSITION-AGE YOUTH. THE GOALS OF KENTUCKY’S STATE OPIOID RESPONSE GRANT ARE TO 1) PREVENT THE DEVELOPMENT OF OUD AND STIMUD BY IMPLEMENTING EVIDENCE-BASED INTERVENTIONS THAT ADDRESS BEHAVIORS THAT MAY LEAD TO A USE DISORDER OR OVERDOSE; 2) REDUCE OVERDOSE FATALITIES AND OTHER NEGATIVE IMPACTS OF OPIOID AND STIMULANT USE THROUGH EXPANSION OF HARM REDUCTION STRATEGIES AND PRINCIPLES; 3) REDUCE OUD/STIMUD, OVERDOSE, AND RELATED HEALTH CONSEQUENCES BY INCREASING EQUITABLE AVAILABILITY AND ACCESSIBILITY OF EVIDENCE-BASED TREATMENTS THAT INCLUDE THE USE OF FDA-APPROVED MEDICATIONS FOR OPIOID USE DISORDER (MOUD); AND 4) FACILITATE AND SUSTAIN LONG-TERM RECOVERY FROM OUD/STIMUD BY INCREASING ACCESS TO SUPPORT SERVICES THAT BUILD RECOVERY CAPITAL. KENTUCKY PROPOSES TO SERVE 104,000 INDIVIDUALS IN YEAR 1, 154,000 IN YEAR 2, AND 154,000 IN YEAR 3. GRANT ACTIVITIES WILL BE PRIORITIZED IN CATCHMENT AREAS WITH HIGH RATES OF OPIOID OR STIMULANT OVERDOSE, WHICH INCLUDE APPALACHIAN EASTERN KY, NORTHERN KY, CENTRAL KY, AND GREATER JEFFERSON COUNTY. THROUGH THE STATE OPIOID RESPONSE GRANT, KENTUCKY WILL BE BETTER EQUIPPED TO SUPPORT THE BEHAVIORAL HEALTH NEEDS OF THE COMMONWEALTH AND IMPLEMENT EVIDENCE-BASED INTERVENTIONS TO END THE OPIOID AND STIMULANT EPIDEMIC.

Verbatim from USAspending.gov. Capitalization, abbreviations, and codes are unchanged.

The Buildout's read

What the model surfaced from this award

Confidence: high
In plain English

Expand evidence-based prevention, treatment, and recovery services for Kentucky's opioid and stimulant use disorders across vulnerable populations.

Sub-sectors
opioid-crisis-responsemental-health-servicessubstance-abuse-treatment
Why this matters

Addresses critical public health crisis; Kentucky's overdose deaths remain high despite 9.8% reduction, with fentanyl and methamphetamine driving fatalities.

Supply-chain signal

Increases demand for medication-assisted treatment (MOUD) providers, behavioral health infrastructure, and harm-reduction service delivery systems.

U.S.–China competition angle

Indirectly relevant; fentanyl trafficking from China drives U.S. opioid crisis; this grant strengthens domestic response capacity.

Generated by award_classification v2.0.0 via claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 on 2026-05-15. Cost: $0.002982.

Period of performance
Start
2024-09-30
End
2027-09-29
Status
activein 501 days
Other awards from this recipient
Sources

The Buildout does not edit federal records. Any inaccuracy reflects the upstream source; it will update here when corrected there.