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Published May 18th, 2026, 06:34 pm

Five years ago drug overdoses were killing more than 3,000 people a year in Michigan. It was the worst the state had seen. Behind that number were parents, sons and daughters — people who’d been trying to get well for years. That number is coming down. But the people who do this work are cautious about it. Fewer deaths may not mean fewer people in danger.

Addiction touches lives in different ways. For many of us, it might be indirectly. One analysis put the cost to Michigan last year at $38 billion: lost work, lost wages, courts, treatment. Now there’s money to fight this: Millions from the settlement with the maker of OxyContin, Purdue Pharma. Detroit gets a share, and it's deciding how to spend it now.

Ali Abazeed leads Detroit’s health department, and founded Dearborn’s before that. He spoke to The Metro's Robyn Vincent about what the city is doing to reduce overdose deaths and help residents be healthier.

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The Metro

Why health is the common theme threading Detroit's city departments

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