Why OFR?
Understand your overdose trends.
Identify missed opportunities for prevention and intervention.
Implement innovative, community-specific overdose prevention strategies.
A nationally recognized model, OFR is being used by a growing number of communities to strengthen their community-based responses to the opioid epidemic by generating recommendations to address system, agency, population, research, and policy needs.
What do OFRs involve?
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Analysis and review
of aggregate data to understand overdose trends, select cases to review, and provide content for case findings and recommendations
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Facilitation
of a series of confidential individual death reviews by a multidisciplinary team to effectively identify system gaps; missed opportunities for prevention and intervention; and innovative, community-specific prevention and intervention strategies
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Implement recommendations
by presenting recommendations to a governing committee that supports and provides resources for implementation and a framework for accountability for action
OFR Multidisciplinary Members
OFR teams need a diverse set of members from disciplines and sectors that represent different agencies and the community. Blending input from public health professionals, public safety agencies, providers, and the community will result in a more complete understanding of the community, the services available, and the decedent’s life and interactions. Common core members of an OFR include:
- Medical examiner or coroner
- Public health professionals
- Public safety agencies, including first responders and the criminal justice system
- Health care systems
- Behavioral health providers
- Child services