Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Medicaid change intended to help addicts

- By Liz Navratil

Harrisburg Bureau

HARRISBURG — In an effort to help people get faster treatment for opioid addiction, the state will remove a preauthori­zation requiremen­t for Medicaid recipients who are prescribed some types of medication helpful for recovery, Gov. Tom Wolf is expected to announce Thursday.

Preauthori­zation can take up to 24 hours, and the administra­tion hopes the change — which advocates have been calling for — will prevent situations in which people struggling with addiction must decide whether to pay out of pocket for the medication, continue to use drugs or risk going into painful withdrawal.

“If even one person is delayed access to the treatment they need, it is one person too many,” Mr. Wolf, a Democrat, said in a statement. The governor will also ask private insurers to consider making similar changes, according to sources familiar with his plans. He does not have jurisdicti­on over Medicare, which runs through the federal government.

Mr. Wolf’s announceme­nt, expected Thursday afternoon at Crozer-Chester Medical Center in Chester, comes partway through a three-month-long opioid disaster declaratio­n, which allows government officials to temporaril­y suspend some regulation­s to help combat a deadly epidemic. But this change likely will continue past the end of the declaratio­n, according to two people familiar with the plan.

The waiver applies to medication-assisted treatments,

counseling.

Treatments with Suboxone and Vivitrol require a prescripti­on from a doctor. They often also require a preauthori­zation from insurance.

The preauthori­zation can come immediatel­y, or it can take as long as 24 hours to process. With the waiver in place, a prescripti­on alone will be enough to ensure that Medicaid recipients receive coverage for such treatments.

Groups that provide drug addiction services have been pushing insurers to remove preauthori­zation requiremen­ts for medication-assisted treatment.

“That’s going to save some lives,” said Jose Benitez, executive director of Prevention Point. “We’ll be able to prescribe muchneeded medicine to people — it’s a huge help.”

Nationally, groups such as the American Medical Associatio­n have also advocated for the removal of preauthori­zation requiremen­ts.

“When a patient seeking care for an opioid use disorder is forced to delay or interrupt ongoing treatment … there often is a negative impact on their care and health. With respect to opioid use disorders, that could mean relapse or death from overdose,” the associatio­n wrote in a letter sent to attorneys general across the country.

Pennsylvan­ia logged 4,642 drug-related overdose deaths in 2016, about 85 percent of which involved an opioid, according to an analysis by the federal Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion. Toxicology tests can take weeks to process, so numbers for 2017 are still being finalized, but state officials said they suspect there was an increase between 2016 and 2017.

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