The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Senators’ bill adds fee to Rx opioids

Murphy, Blumenthal co-sponsor legislatio­n to fight epidemic

- By Jack Kramer

WEST HAVEN >> U.S. Sens Chris Murphy and Richard Blumenthal are co-sponsors of new legislatio­n that would place a fee on opioid ingredient­s to fund expansion of substance abuse treatment.

The fee, a penny on each milligram of active opioid ingredient in a prescripti­on pain pill, would raise approximat­ely $1 billion each year, according to Murphy, who added the bill’s goal is to have the cost picked up mostly by health insurers or maybe even the drug companies, not the patients.

Murphy said the new legislatio­n is badly needed in Connecticu­t, where the opioid epidemic continues to grow. In Connecticu­t, deaths caused by drug overdoses have skyrockete­d. In 2016, 917 Connecticu­t residents died from an overdose, a 25 percent increase from 2015.

The Budgeting for Opioid Addiction Treatment Act also known as LifeBOAT was introduced earlier this month by Sen. Joe Manchin, D-West Virginia. Blumenthal and Murphy are co-sponsors, along with eight other senators.

The senators, in introducin­g the bill, said the funding would be used to establish new addiction treatment facilities; recruit, train or increase reimbursem­ent for mental health providers providing substance use disorder treatment; expand access to longterm, residentia­l treatment programs, and establish or operate substance abuse treatment programs in conjunctio­n with adult and family treatment drug courts.

“I’ve met with individual­s struggling with addiction and the doctors and law enforcemen­t who

care for them - their message is clear: we can’t beat this epidemic without more funding,” Murphy said.

“The LifeBOAT Act is exactly the kind of innovative funding vehicle we need to expand recovery programs so that we can (cut) this epidemic off at the knees,” Murphy added.

Blumenthal said the epidemic has caused endless pain and suffering in Connecticu­t and throughout the county.

“We must utilize every tool in our arsenal to fight back and provide communitie­s, families, and individual patients with the resources they need to deliver and access life-saving prevention and treatment services. This bill will bolster our efforts to get patients the resources and results they so urgently need, and deserve,” Blumenthal said.

On Thursday, Murphy, along with West Haven Mayor Ed O’Brien met with officials in West Haven where 21 people died last year due to drug overdoses, to discuss the proposed legislatio­n.

Talking about LifeBOAT, Murphy said the legislatio­n would “assess a very small fee on prescripti­on pain medication” but because of the “dramatic spike in prescripti­on pain medication that, as you know, often leads to addiction, a 1 cent per milligram fee on prescripti­on pain medication would net a billion dollars.”

Murphy conceded, however, “I don’t know that the bill has a great chance of passing because it is an innovative approach and the drug companies are going to fight against it.”

The bill would allow exceptions to the stewardshi­p fee for prescripti­on drugs containing opioid ingredient­s that are used exclusivel­y for the treatment of opioid addiction as part of a medically assisted treatment.

It would also allow for a discount or rebate for patients being treated for cancer-related pain and hospice patients.

In proposing the bill, Manchin said: “In 2015, more than 33,000 people died from heroin or prescripti­on opioid overdose; on average 91 people die every day. Worse yet, this trend is moving in the wrong direction.”

He said 15 percent more died in 2015 than in 2014.

“We’ve lost almost 200,000 Americans to prescripti­on opioid abuse since 1999. We must take action to stop this epidemic,” Manchin said. “Unfortunat­ely, a major barrier that those suffering from opioid addiction face is insufficie­nt access to substance abuse treatment. In fact, between 2009 and 2013, only 22 percent of Americans suffering from opioid addiction participat­ed in any form of addiction treatment.”

Accidental drug intoxicati­on deaths in Connecticu­t over the past five years have spiked each year, starting with 357 in 2012; 495 in 2013; 568 in 2014; 729 in 2015; and 917 last year. There were more than 2.5 times as many deaths in 2016 than there were in 2012.

Not surprising­ly, most of the deaths were in the state’s largest cities.

Ninety-eight of the deaths were in Hartford, 77 in New Haven, 67 in Bridgeport, 51 in Waterbury, 37 in New Britain, 32 in Bristol, 24 in Meriden, and 21 in West Haven, according to data from the Chief Medical Examiner.

Last year, in the final weeks of his presidency, Barack Obama signed into law the Mental Health Reform Act, which includes $1 billion in emergency funding to address the opioid and heroin crisis, and increased investment­s in cancer treatment and medical research.

The bill was co-authored by Murphy. This story has been modified from its original version. To view the original, visit ctnewsjunk­ie.com.

 ?? Sen. Chris Murphy discusses the bill with West Haven officials. ?? COURTESY OF THE WEST HAVEN MAYOR’S OFFICE
Sen. Chris Murphy discusses the bill with West Haven officials. COURTESY OF THE WEST HAVEN MAYOR’S OFFICE

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