The Palm Beach Post

Senate easily passes opioids package in time for campaigns

- By Colby Itkowitz Washington Post

WASHINGTON — The Senate passed the final version of a sweeping opioids package Wednesday afternoon and will send it to the White House just in time for lawmakers to campaign on the issue before the November midterm elections.

The vote was 99 to 1, with only Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, opposing it.

The bill unites dozens of smaller proposals sponsored by hundreds of lawmakers, many of whom face tough reelection fights. It creates, expands and reauthoriz­es programs and policies across almost every federal agency, aiming to address different aspects of the opioid epidemic, including prevention, treatment and recovery.

It is one of Congress’ most significan­t legislativ­e achievemen­ts this year, a rare bipartisan response to a growing public health crisis that resulted in 72,000 drug-overdose deaths last year. It marks a moment of bipartisan accomplish­ment at an especially rancorous time on Capitol Hill as senators debate Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination to the Supreme Court.

Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, who sounded the alarm on opioid addiction four years ago, is credited with the slice of the bill that could have the greatest effect. It will require the U.S. Postal Service to screen packages for fentanyl shipped from overseas, mainly China. Synthetic opioids that are difficult to detect are increasing­ly being found in pills and heroin and are responsibl­e for an increase in overdose deaths.

“I will say getting that passed, to me, is just common sense. I think it’s overdue. I’m disappoint­ed it took us this long,” Portman said in a floor speech Tuesday. “How many people had to die before Congress stood up and did the right thing with regard to telling our own post office, ‘you have to provide better screening?’ ”

On Wednesday, just before the vote, he called it a “glimmer of hope.”

The bill’s passage comes a year after President Donald Trump declared the opioid crisis a national emergency. The Senate vote is the last step before he signs the measure into law. The House passed it 393 to 8 last week.

Public-health advocates laud the bill’s increased attention to treatment, which they say is the key component to overcoming addiction. The legislatio­n would create a grant program for comprehens­ive recovery centers that include housing and job training, as well as mental and physical health care. It would increase access to medication-assisted treatment that helps people with substance-abuse disorders safely wean themselves.

Another major aspect of the bill is the change to a decades-old arcane rule that prohibited Medicaid from covering patients with substance-abuse disorders who were receiving treatment in a mental health facility with more than 16 beds. The bill lifts that rule to allow for 30 days of residentia­l treatment coverage.

The opioid crisis has hit communitie­s big and small, rural and urban, in states red and blue. The more cynical view of the bipartisan work on this package is that it’s an easy election-year win. Although it contains provisions that help address the problem, it does not dedicate the level of funding and longterm commitment needed to fight a crisis of this magnitude, many experts say.

“This legislatio­n edges us closer to treating addiction as the devastatin­g disease it is, but it neglects to provide the long-term investment we’ve seen in responses to other major public health crises,” said Lindsey Vuolo, Associate Director of Health Law and Policy at Center on Addiction. “We won’t be able to make meaningful progress against the tide of addiction unless we make significan­t changes to incorporat­e addiction treatment into the existing health care system.”

 ?? BRIAN L. FRANK / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? One of the provisions of a bipartisan bill would make it easier for nurses to prescribe Suboxone, an antiaddict­ion medication that requires extra training and a special license.
BRIAN L. FRANK / THE NEW YORK TIMES One of the provisions of a bipartisan bill would make it easier for nurses to prescribe Suboxone, an antiaddict­ion medication that requires extra training and a special license.

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