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Opioid Treatment Funds In Senate Bill Would Fall Far Short Of Needs

A sign for help with addiction is displayed in a section of Philadelphia that has become a hub for heroin addicts. In Pennsylvania in 2016, Medicaid expansion helped 124,000 people get treatment for their substance use disorder. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

At a lunch last week, President Trump tried to persuade some reluctant senators to endorse repealing the Affordable Care Act. During听, he mentioned a provision in the Senate Republican proposal that allocates funding for听, saying, 鈥淲e鈥檙e committing $45 billion to help combat the opioid epidemic, and some states in particular like that.鈥

But addiction treatment specialists warn that sum of money is far from enough to address a crisis that has escalated across the United States in recent years,听听tens of thousands of people.

The federal money would be spent over about a decade, and is part of a bill that also dramatically cuts Medicaid, which is helping many people get treatment now. Those cuts will听 鈥 those living in states that expanded the Medicaid program under the Affordable Act.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e going to take a lot of people, take away their health care benefit, and basically do just a small grant to each state. It鈥檚 going to be real big problem,鈥 said Richard Edley, executive director of the听, which includes hundreds of mental health and substance use disorder providers in Pennsylvania. 鈥淵ou hate to say you鈥檙e opposing [$45 billion], but it鈥檚 packaged with a rollback of benefits to these same individuals.鈥

In Pennsylvania in 2016, Medicaid expansion helped 124,000 people get treatment for their substance use disorder. Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf has said his state won鈥檛 be able to maintain Medicaid expansion if the federal government cuts back its share of spending. Without the program, many of those people would have limited access to help for their addiction.

Edley did some back-of-the-envelope math, and is really concerned at what he found.

If $45 billion is distributed to all 50 states by population, Pennsylvania would get about $1.8 billion, spread out over nine years. Depending on other variables, that could range from somewhere between $1,000 to $2,000 per person per year who might need treatment, based on how many people got treatment under expanded Medicaid in Pennsylvania last year.

By contrast, one year of maintenance treatment with methadone costs about $4,700 per year, according to the听. Methadone is an evidence-based treatment that makes it possible for a person with opioid addiction to work and lead a normal life.

But the cuts to Medicaid would amount to billions of lost dollars in Pennsylvania.

The state says it can鈥檛 make up the difference. So, many of the people who get opioid treatment through Medicaid could lose coverage and then turn to the grant that鈥檚 specifically meant for opioid treatment.

And, like any chronic disease, opioid treatment takes many steps 鈥 medication and, perhaps, a lifetime of management.

鈥淵our typical individual doesn鈥檛 get treatment right in 10 days on their first try,鈥 said Jennifer Smith, Pennsylvania鈥檚 acting secretary for the Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs.

鈥淸The funding] doesn鈥檛 even come close. Doesn鈥檛 even come close,鈥 Smith added. 鈥淲e can piece together some solutions that might help get us a little closer to where we had been, but the end result is more people are going to die.鈥

Every day in Pennsylvania an average of 13 people die from a drug overdose.

And there also would be ripple effects from that drop in funding, Smith said 鈥斕, bankruptcies because of treatment costs, and more work for each county鈥檚 department of children and youth services. Smith also worries that less treatment would mean more people would be desperate to support their habit.

鈥淎nd they end up with a criminal record,鈥 she said. 鈥淣obody wants to hire them.鈥

So they drop out of the workforce.

Experts like Smith and Edley are concerned that if the federal government pulls back spending on Medicaid, the costs simply will be shifted somewhere else.

鈥淵ou stop funding for [treatment and] they don鈥檛 go away鈥 said Edley. 鈥淧eople end up in emergency rooms. They end up in uncompensated care, homelessness. You talk to people in the criminal justice system 鈥 you see increased incarcerations.鈥

He expects that if the Senate GOP health bill is approved, lawmakers will have to come back to this issue in six months or a year.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e going to be back at the drawing board,鈥 Edley said, 鈥渞ealizing, 鈥楢ll right, that didn鈥檛 work, and there are too many people being hurt.鈥欌

Edley and Deb Shoemaker, executive director of the Pennsylvania Psychiatric Society, also see a double standard with how the Senate GOP bill treats people who have a substance use disorder.

Shoemaker is very active on substance use issues in Pennsylvania, and said she often tries to personalize her pitch to lawmakers.

鈥淲ould you want to say, 鈥楬ey, I鈥檓 sorry that you have cancer but you can only get treatment once a week,鈥 or 鈥榶ou can only get dialysis once a week,鈥欌 she said, pointing to the disparity in the way the proposal treats substance abuse versus other physical conditions.

鈥淪o think about it that way,鈥 she said. 鈥淵es, [treatment for substance use disorder] is a cost, but in the long run, they鈥檙e healthier. They鈥檙e alive.鈥

Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.) has defended the proposed cuts.

鈥淚f it鈥檚 not worth it to the state to buy this coverage at 43 cents on the dollar [about what the state contributes to non-expansion Medicaid recipients], then how is it worth it to those very same taxpayers 鈥 who, at the end of the day, have to provide the funding for the federal program 鈥 why is it worth it to them to pay 90 cents on the dollar? It just doesn鈥檛 make sense,鈥 he told NPR in听.

In a written statement, Toomey has said 鈥渇ighting the scourge of opioid and heroin abuse remains a top priority of mine.鈥 His office also says current Medicaid funding is unsustainable.

An earlier version of the bill included just $2 billion in grants for substance use disorder treatment. Senate GOP leaders included the $45 billion as a concession to moderate Republicans like Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio and Sen. Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia, who represent states that have been hit particularly hard by the crisis.

This story is part of a reporting partnership with听听 and听Kaiser Health News.

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