Rapport
2026
Titre de série :
National drug control strategy
Auteur(s) :
ONDCP (Office of National Drug Control Policy)
Année
2026
Page(s) :
195 p.
Langue(s) :
Anglais
Éditeur(s) :
Washington, DC : The White House
;
Washington, DC : ONDCP
Refs biblio. :
234
Domaine :
Drogues illicites
Discipline :
SAN (Santé publique / Public health)
Thésaurus géographique
ETATS-UNIS
Thésaurus mots-clés
PREVENTION
;
LUTTE
;
SURDOSE
;
TRAITEMENT
;
POLITIQUE
;
PLANIFICATION SANITAIRE
;
PRODUIT ILLICITE
;
TRAFIC
;
PRODUCTION
;
OPIOIDES
;
FENTANYL
;
PROGRAMME
;
ORGANISATION CRIMINELLE
;
JUSTICE
;
ACCES AUX SOINS
Note de contenu :
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
- Vision and Mission Statement.
- Executive Summary.
- Introduction.
- Chapter 1: Defining current and emerging drug threats.
- Chapter 2: Securing the global supply chain from foreign terrorist and transnational criminal organizations.
- Chapter 3: Stop the flow of illicit drugs into American communities.
- Chapter 4: Global campaign against transnational criminal and foreign terrorist threats.
- Chapter 5: Creating a drug-free America as a social norm.
- Chapter 6: Bringing help at all stages of addiction to the mainstream.
- Chapter 7: Celebrate and support recovery.
- Chapter 8: Rescue and overdose response.
- Epilogue: In their memory.
- Appendix A: National Drug Control Strategy implementation process.
- Appendix B: Strategy goals and objectives / Performance Review System (PRS).
- Appendix C: Plan for collecting, using, and acquiring data to facilitate the use of evidence in drug control policymaking (Data Plan).
- Appendix D: 2026 Counternarcotic border strategies.
- The National Southwest Border Counternarcotics Strategy.
- The National Northern Border Counternarcotics Strategy.
- The National Caribbean Border Counternarcotics Strategy.
- Appendix E: Classified annex summary.
- Appendix F: National treatment plan.
- Appendix G: The national prevention framework.
- List of acronyms.
- References.
- Vision and Mission Statement.
- Executive Summary.
- Introduction.
- Chapter 1: Defining current and emerging drug threats.
- Chapter 2: Securing the global supply chain from foreign terrorist and transnational criminal organizations.
- Chapter 3: Stop the flow of illicit drugs into American communities.
- Chapter 4: Global campaign against transnational criminal and foreign terrorist threats.
- Chapter 5: Creating a drug-free America as a social norm.
- Chapter 6: Bringing help at all stages of addiction to the mainstream.
- Chapter 7: Celebrate and support recovery.
- Chapter 8: Rescue and overdose response.
- Epilogue: In their memory.
- Appendix A: National Drug Control Strategy implementation process.
- Appendix B: Strategy goals and objectives / Performance Review System (PRS).
- Appendix C: Plan for collecting, using, and acquiring data to facilitate the use of evidence in drug control policymaking (Data Plan).
- Appendix D: 2026 Counternarcotic border strategies.
- The National Southwest Border Counternarcotics Strategy.
- The National Northern Border Counternarcotics Strategy.
- The National Caribbean Border Counternarcotics Strategy.
- Appendix E: Classified annex summary.
- Appendix F: National treatment plan.
- Appendix G: The national prevention framework.
- List of acronyms.
- References.
Résumé :
America is facing the deadliest drug threat in our history. Over the last 25 years, drug overdose deaths in the United States from synthetic opioids, including fentanyl, have risen to more than 100 times their 1999 levels. The rate of fatal overdoses from other drugs, including cocaine and methamphetamine, has also surged. The overdose crisis calls for bold action.
The Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) has outlined vital steps for attacking two drivers of this crisis. First, we need to protect against overdoses and reduce demand for drugs, including by preventing drug use before it starts, saving lives, and supporting people in recovery. Second, we need to dismantle the supply chains of illicit drugs, including cracking down on the global criminal networks fueling American deaths. These lines of effort are two sides of the same coin. Both must be pursued aggressively for meaningful and lasting change. [...]
The 2024 Strategy is aimed at addressing the overdose crisis from multiple angles. This includes preventing youth substance use, expanding access to life-saving medications like naloxone, expanding access to evidence-based treatment, building a recovery-ready Nation, and ramping up efforts to disrupt and dismantle drug trafficking. [Extracts]
The Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) has outlined vital steps for attacking two drivers of this crisis. First, we need to protect against overdoses and reduce demand for drugs, including by preventing drug use before it starts, saving lives, and supporting people in recovery. Second, we need to dismantle the supply chains of illicit drugs, including cracking down on the global criminal networks fueling American deaths. These lines of effort are two sides of the same coin. Both must be pursued aggressively for meaningful and lasting change. [...]
The 2024 Strategy is aimed at addressing the overdose crisis from multiple angles. This includes preventing youth substance use, expanding access to life-saving medications like naloxone, expanding access to evidence-based treatment, building a recovery-ready Nation, and ramping up efforts to disrupt and dismantle drug trafficking. [Extracts]
Affiliation :
USA
Historique