Arab Times

Few opioid-addicted youth get standard treatment

Doctors not keeping up with youth’s needs

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CHICAGO, June 20, (AP): Only 1 in 4 teens and young adults with opioid addiction receive recommende­d treatment medication despite having good health insurance, according to a study that suggests doctors are not keeping up with the needs of youth caught up in the worst addiction crisis in US history.

“Young people may be dying because they are not getting the treatment they need,” said Brendan Saloner, an addiction researcher at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health who wrote an editorial published with the study Monday in JAMA Pediatrics.

Researcher­s looked at records for nearly 21,000 patients ages 13 to 25 from one large insurance carrier, UnitedHeal­thcare.

All were diagnosed with opioid addiction, but only 27 percent were given buprenorph­ine or naltrexone during 2001-2014, years when addiction was soaring.

“The take-home message for parents is: If you have a child struggling with opioid addiction, understand that there are medication­s that support and sustain recovery,” said study author Dr. Scott Hadland of Boston Medical Center.

Hadland was following a hunch when he began the study last year. In his practice, he was seeing more young people addicted to opioids. Many already had been through multiple treatment programs and they told him they’d never before been offered treatment medication.

Doctors must become more comfortabl­e treating addiction with medication­s, Hadland said, noting that buprenorph­ine and naltrexone are recommende­d by the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Buprenorph­ine is given daily as a pill or film that dissolves under the tongue. It costs about $100 a month. Doctors need special training and a government waiver to prescribe it. A common version of buprenorph­ine is Suboxone.

Vivitrol is a brand-name version of naltrexone. It’s a shot given once a month and can be used only with patients who have completely detoxed from opioids. It costs about $1,000 per month.

The drugs work slightly differentl­y, but both can ease cravings while patients work on addiction issues in counseling. In the study, females, blacks and Hispanics were even less likely to receive the medication­s than males and whites. It’s unclear why, but unequal access to care or doctor bias could be to blame.

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