Chattanooga Times Free Press

Amid drug epidemic, Georgia limits treatment centers

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ATLANTA — Georgia is increasing regulation of addiction treatment centers, prompted by complaints from northwest Georgia lawmakers a cluster of programs there mostly treat people who travel from nearby states.

Gov. Nathan Deal signed the legislatio­n Thursday.

State records obtained by The Associated Press back up residents’ complaints. Last year, one in five people treated at an opioid treatment center in Georgia came from out of state, according to state Department of Behavioral Health and Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es records. In Northwest Georgia, two out of every three patients weren’t from the state.

Patients and treatment center owners say locals’ concerns are unfair and stigmatize the

facilities and people seeking help for addiction to opioids and other drugs. New patients receiving methadone must take their doses at a treatment center and only are allowed to take a few doses home after passing drug tests and completing other forms of treatment.

Access to treatment facilities is a problem nationwide. In 2015, fewer than 20 percent of people who needed addiction treatment received it, according to the National Survey on Drug Use and Health sponsored by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Georgia leads the South in the number of treatment centers with 71. Florida, with twice the population, has 69.

“It appears that we have had abuses of the system,” Deal said. “We believe just as we had to crack down on pain pill clinics, this is a crackdown in the area of the opioids themselves.”

State Sen. Jeff Mullis, a Republican from Chickamaug­a in the northweste­rn part of the state, sponsored the bill and blamed Georgia’s relatively lax rules for the number of treatment centers locating in his area rather than across the border in Tennessee where regulation­s are stricter.

Treatment centers now will have to demonstrat­e a need for their services before opening, similar to Tennessee’s model. The measure also limits the number of treatment centers that can open in newly created regions around the state.

The outlines effectivel­y stop new centers from opening in northwest Georgia; existing facilities already meet the region’s cap.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about 1,300 people fatally overdosed on drugs in Georgia last year.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Ashley Gardner, 34, a recovering addict, drives 100 miles from her home in Maryville, Tenn., to Chatsworth, Ga., a trip she makes three times a week to receive doses of methadone.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Ashley Gardner, 34, a recovering addict, drives 100 miles from her home in Maryville, Tenn., to Chatsworth, Ga., a trip she makes three times a week to receive doses of methadone.

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