This webinar originally occurred on October 7, 2021
Duration: 1 hour
Overview
State and territorial public health agencies rely on timely and accurate overdose mortality data to drive effective prevention initiatives. As the number of overdose deaths in the United States has surged, the need for this data has only increased. Medicolegal death investigators play a critical role in investigating, certifying, and reporting overdose deaths, and ensuring that public health agencies have access to high quality and timely overdose mortality data.
Though medicolegal death investigators are integral to overdose monitoring and surveillance efforts, access to training, peer engagement, and mentorship in this area varies widely across the country. In 2020, the Association of State and Territorial Health Agencies (ASTHO), with support from the CDC, launched the Project ECHO: Overdose Fatality Investigation Techniques (OD-FIT) to address this need. The pilot year of OD-FIT ran from January through July 2021 and offered free overdose-specific training to coroners and medical examiners through a virtual platform.
This webinar provided an overview of the Project ECHO model, the content and structure of OD-FIT, lessons learned from the pilot year, and information about the series which launched on October 26th.
View Project ECHO OD-FIT Participation Video
Detailed Learning Objectives
- Attendees will be able to define the structure and goals of the Project ECHO model.
- Attendees will be able to describe how and why the ECHO model is an effective learning tool for coroners, medical examiners, and other medicolegal death investigators.
- Attendees will be able to describe the importance of death reporting for overdose prevention efforts.
Presenters
- Richa Ranade, MPH | Director for Social and Behavioral Health at the Association of State and Territorial Health Agencies (ASTHO)
Funding for this Forensic Technology Center of Excellence webinar has been provided by the National Institute of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice.
The opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this webinar are those of the presenter(s) and do not necessarily reflect those of the U.S. Department of Justice.
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