Every life lost is one too many, especially when the death was preventable. In 2024, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated that approximately 80,000 people died from an overdose, representing a 27% decrease from 2023. While this marks the first decline in overdose deaths in years, overdose remains the leading cause of preventable death in the United States. The question remains, what more should we be doing?
Public health leaders at the local, state, and federal levels have made historic investments to address the overdose crisis. These efforts include expanding naloxone distribution (a medication that rapidly reverses the effects of an opioid overdose), addressing workforce shortages, increasing access to evidence-based treatment, and strengthening prevention and education programs. Collectively, these strategies are saving lives. Yet despite this progress, people continue to overdose, and far too many still die.
This reality raises a critical question for policymakers and system leaders: where are the gaps, and how can they be closed?
Despite tremendous efforts to reduce overdose and expand access to care, system-level barriers continue to delay treatment and, in many cases, prevent engagement altogether, especially in rural and underserved communities.
These barriers include:
People who decide to seek treatment often change their mind while waiting for the first available appointment or inpatient bed. That's why treatment must be easy to access during this crucial window of willingness. When treatment isn't readily available, the risk of continued drug use and overdose increases.
Traditional office-based models, while well established and critical, are limited to whom they can reach. Many individuals at the highest risk of overdose also experience mental health challenges, housing instability, financial stress, stigma, and trauma, all of which make seeking care at a traditional health care facility more difficult. Addressing overdose effectively requires approaches that account for these realities.
Mobile health clinics offer a practical solution to many of the challenges that limit overdose prevention efforts in traditional office-based settings. By delivering services directly into communities, mobile clinics:
By taking care where the people are, mobile clinics close the gap between risk and response, ensuring that lifesaving interventions are available when they are most needed. Mobile models are particularly effective in rural and underserved communities. Mobile health clinics are a flexible, evidence-informed tool that can strengthen existing overdose prevention infrastructure. When integrated with public health systems, Medicaid programs, and community-based services, mobile clinics expand reach, improve equity, and enhance continuity of care.
State and local leaders can advance overdose prevention in their communities by:
Mobile health clinics are not a replacement for traditional care. They are a critical extension of it. By reducing barriers and delivering timely, evidence-based services, mobile clinics help close persistent gaps in overdose prevention and save lives.
Meeting people where they are is not just a best practice; it is our responsibility.
Patsy Cunningham, LCPC
Sr. Program Director, Behavioral Health,
Mission Mobile Medical
Mobile health clinics play an important role in expanding access to overdose prevention, harm reduction, and behavioral health services, especially in rural and underserved communities.
If you’re interested in learning more, explore these resources:
• Mobile behavioral health and opioid use disorder programs
https://www.missionmobilemed.com/behavioral-health-networked-satellite-clinics
• Mobile clinics designed for behavioral health and substance use disorder care
https://www.missionmobilemed.com/behavioral-health
• How mobile clinics help address opioid addiction
https://www.missionmobilemed.com/en/blog/mobileclinicsapowerfultooltoaddressopioidaddiction
• How mobile clinics support behavioral health services
https://www.missionmobilemed.com/en/blog/mobile-clinics-and-how-they-address-behavioral-health
• Mission Mobile Medical YouTube channel
https://www.youtube.com/@missionmobilemedical