Controversies in Philanthropy: FSSO 119-100 Fall 2021Main MenuChapter 1: EducationAllen La Tournous, Jenna Purslow, Max ZweibackChapter 2: The ArtsChapter 3: HealthcareChapter 4: Social Justice Nonprofitsby Jaidyn Emerson, Nic Kelleher, Chloe MaciejewskiChapter 5: Philanthropy in Developing CountriesWhy Philanthropy MattersBarbara Burgess-Van Akendffa201f9e142dde249b32b2c708a4eebdb9f6da
12021-11-10T14:53:51+00:00Jimmy Cranstonaa02ef692bdb473d26d843bf9e95c77693c24bc83 The Opioid Crisis, 2012 vs 2020Jimmy Cranston12plain79952021-11-17T03:15:41+00:00Jimmy Cranstonaa02ef692bdb473d26d843bf9e95c77693c24bc8
12021-11-10T14:53:51+00:00Jimmy Cranstonaa02ef692bdb473d26d843bf9e95c77693c24bc83 The Opioid Crisis, 2012 vs 2020Jimmy Cranston12plain79952021-11-17T03:15:41+00:00Jimmy Cranstonaa02ef692bdb473d26d843bf9e95c77693c24bc8
12021-11-10T14:53:51+00:00Jimmy Cranstonaa02ef692bdb473d26d843bf9e95c77693c24bc83 The Opioid Crisis, 2012 vs 2020Jimmy Cranston12plain79952021-11-17T03:15:41+00:00Jimmy Cranstonaa02ef692bdb473d26d843bf9e95c77693c24bc8
12021-11-10T14:53:51+00:00Jimmy Cranstonaa02ef692bdb473d26d843bf9e95c77693c24bc83 The Opioid Crisis, 2012 vs 2020Jimmy Cranston12plain79952021-11-17T03:15:41+00:00Jimmy Cranstonaa02ef692bdb473d26d843bf9e95c77693c24bc8
12021-11-10T14:53:51+00:00Jimmy Cranstonaa02ef692bdb473d26d843bf9e95c77693c24bc83 The Opioid Crisis, 2012 vs 2020Jimmy Cranston12plain79952021-11-17T03:15:41+00:00Jimmy Cranstonaa02ef692bdb473d26d843bf9e95c77693c24bc8
12021-11-10T14:53:51+00:00Jimmy Cranstonaa02ef692bdb473d26d843bf9e95c77693c24bc83 The Opioid Crisis, 2012 vs 2020Jimmy Cranston12plain79952021-11-17T03:15:41+00:00Jimmy Cranstonaa02ef692bdb473d26d843bf9e95c77693c24bc8
12021-11-10T14:53:51+00:00Jimmy Cranstonaa02ef692bdb473d26d843bf9e95c77693c24bc83 The Opioid Crisis, 2012 vs 202012plain79952021-11-17T03:15:41+00:00Jimmy Cranstonaa02ef692bdb473d26d843bf9e95c77693c24bc8
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12021-10-20T17:22:03+00:00CDC Opioid Prescription Rate Map, 20205Since the peak of the Crisis, only isolated pockets of the nation haven't seen a reduction in the prescription of opioids. In this year, only 3.6% of counties distributed enough opioids for each resident to have one. The national average prescription rate nearly halved from 81.3 to 43.3 per hundred county residents.plain2021-10-20T17:44:10+00:00
12021-10-20T17:16:35+00:00CDC Opioid Prescription Rate Map, 20124The nation's rural areas, especially in the Ohio and Tennessee Valleys, as well as in rural Oregon and the Desert Southwest, were hardest hit by the Opioid Crisis this year, which was defined as the peak by the CDC. It may not be a coincidence that, in these rural areas, privatized for-profit hospitals dominate the landscape, despite being outnumbered by nonprofits three-to-one nationally.plain2021-10-20T17:34:35+00:00