The White House commission on drug abuse has called on President Donald Trump to declare a nationwide state of emergency.

The appeal was sent Monday and detailed the startling statistic of opioid overdoses which have accumulated to what the office described as 'September 11th every three weeks,' with at least 142 cases to arise every day in the United States.

The report includes a proposal on more efficient ways to regulate the escalating issue, including providing federal agencies with more advanced sensory equipment in order to detect the deadly synthetic opioid, Fentanyl.

The report recommends insurance companies incorporate mental health and substance abuse treatment in their plans as they would physical health coverage.

If approved, hospital staff would be required to get waivers to medically assist treatment options for heroin and opioid addiction with the narcotic, Buprenorphine.

The drug commission suggests decree to allowing similar treatment in prisons as well as providing all law enforcement officers with the emergency narcotic overdose drug, Naloxone.

By next year, the President's Commission hopes to create a monitoring system that oversees the issuing of prescription drugs nationwide.

The White House drug commission said opioid overdoses in the U.S. have accumulated to 'September 11th every three weeks,' with 142 cases arising every day in the United States

President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting about opioid and drug abuse in the Cabinet Room at the White House on March 29, 2017

'Our country needs you, Mr. President,' the report states. 'We know you care deeply about this issue. We also know that you will use the authority of your office to deal with our nation's problems.'

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said the release is 'meant to give the president some immediate steps that he can take to try to make sure that we stop the death that is happening across the country.'

The White House announced plans to carefully review the report's recommendations during this emergency state.

President Donald Trump, right, speaks while New Jersey Governor Chris Christie listens during an opioid and drug abuse listening session in the White House on Wednesday, March 29, 2017.

Grant W. Smith of the Drug Policy Alliance said in an interview with the Washington Post that the drug commission's approach is a more actual advancement in dealing with the deadly statistics.

'It offers a sharp contrast to the overall approach that the Trump administration has been taking to escalate the war on drugs,' Smith said.

It 'is mostly appropriately focused around dealing with the opioid crisis as the health issue that it is.'

In a survey released Monday by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, in 2015, 1 in 3 Americans said they had used prescription opioid painkillers, while almost five percent of participants admitted to abusing the drugs without doctor's prescription.

According to the CDC's most recent annual report on prescription opioid deaths alone, over 22,000 fatalities were reported in the year 2015, equivalent to 'about 62 deaths per day.'

The death rate of synthetic opioids, such as Tramadol and Fentanyl, skyrocketed by 72.2% from 2014 to 2015 in numerous states across the country.

The 2015 report noted heroin related overdose deaths have 'more than quadrupled' since 2010. The alarming numbers continue to increase and do not reflect current statistics.