Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

For addicts, Obamacare ‘saves my life every day’

Experts fear repeal may also alter care for the mentally ill

- By Adam Beam and Carla K. Johnson Associated Press

CATLETTSBU­RG, Ky. — While the Affordable Care Act has brought health coverage to millions of Americans, the effects have been profound, even lifesaving, for someof those caught up in the nation’s opioid-addiction crisis.

In Kentucky, which has been ravaged worse than almost any other state by fentanyl, heroin and other drugs, Tyler Witten went into rehab at Medicaid’s expense after the state expanded the program under a provision of the act.

Until then, he had been addicted to painkiller­s for more than a decade. “It saved my life,” hesaid. Addicts and mentally ill people who gained access to treatment programs for the first time are worried about how that might change as President Donald Trump and Republican­s in Congress try to make good on their promise to repeal and replace Obamacare.

Repeal could end coverage for 1.8 million people who have undergone addiction or mental health treatment and could cut $5.5 billion in spending on such services, said Richard Frank, a health economist at Harvard Medical School.

Some GOP governors insist addicts have nothing to fear from repeal because, they say, Medicaid will continue to pay for treatment.

But Democrats and others are dubious.

Currently the federal government covers a certain percentage of each state’s Medicaid costs, however high they might go.

As part of the plan to junk Obamacare, the Trump administra­tion has expressed support instead for giving states a fixed amount of money for Medicaid and letting them design their own programs.

But Raymond Castro, senior policy analyst for New Jersey Policy Perspectiv­e, a left-leaning think tank, said these block grants are likely to come with less money.

And that could force states to cut benefits.

Republican New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who has made the opioid crisis his top priority in his final year in office, said hewould support a shift to block grants because of the flexibilit­y they give states.

But he said the people receiving treatment through the Medicaid expansion now shouldn’t be forgotten.

“Whatever changes are made to the ACA should be made with those people in mind, because we don’t help ourselves by kicking those people off coverage,” Christie said.

In areas overwhelme­d by the opioid crisis, the uncertaint­y is worrisome to people receiving treatment.

In Pennsylvan­ia, nearly 63,000 newly eligible Medicaid enrollees received drug and alcohol treatment in 2015, the first year of the state’s expansion.

One of them was Pittsburgh restaurant hostess Erika Lindgren, who credits the health care law with getting her quickly into a 26-day rehab program in 2015 and covering the daily medication­s she takes to fight opioid cravings.

When she was uninsured, getting into rehab involved waiting lists and daily phone calls to see if a publicly funded bed had opened up.

With coverage under the Affordable Care Act, “Iwas able to pack my bag at that moment,” Lindgren, 44, said. “Iwas in an in-patient rehab within an hour and a half of making that call.”

“I am scared to death to lose my coverage,” she added. “It saves my life every day.”

Care for mental illness, too, expanded under the Affordable Care Act.

Marquitta Nelson, a homeless Chicagoan with severe depression, is getting psychiatri­c care and treatment for asthma, arthritis and other conditions since she obtained Medicaid coverage under the health law expansion. She is waiting to be assigned to a shelter and staying with a friend.

“Am I expected not to take my medication­s and wig out and be walking up and down the street, not coherent?” Nelson, 60, said.

 ?? DYLAN LOVAN/AP ?? TylerWitte­n, a former addict, peers through a window of a residentia­l addiction center Feb. 1 in Catlettsbu­rg, Ky.
DYLAN LOVAN/AP TylerWitte­n, a former addict, peers through a window of a residentia­l addiction center Feb. 1 in Catlettsbu­rg, Ky.

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