Dayton Daily News

PRISCRIBED ADDICTION

Lax oversight leaves room for ineffectiv­e drug treatment and illegal sales.

- By Katie Wedell Staff Writer

Millions in state and federal money has poured into southwest Ohio to address the opioid epidemic but a Dayton Daily News investigat­ion found some of that tax money is going toward ineffectiv­e care as oversight of smaller treatment centers has lagged.

Statewide about $1 billion is spent in tax dollars annually to address the opioid epidemic, including treatment, law enforcemen­t and prevention.

Medicaid pays for half of all medication-assisted treatment (MAT) for opioid addictions in Ohio —

more than $52.6 million in the first half of 2018 for just the treatment drugs.

But the current patchwork system of oversight puts public dollars at risk of going to programs that aren’t following the practices shown to be the most effective, or worse, treatment drugs like Suboxone are being sold illegally on local streets and in jails.

'We want patients across the state to be able to be in quality environmen­ts where they can experience successful recovery.'

“The fly- by- night, Medicaid- funded MAT treatment programs that have popped up have terrible track records. They are milking the system and not improving the lives of half the people who need their help because the state isn’t tracking their efficacy,” said Jan Lepore-Jentleson, executive director of East End Community Services. “Treatment programs need to be monitored for effectiven­ess.”

Dayton Daily News Investigat­es followed the hundreds of millions of dollars spent on opioid addiction treatment in Ohio to determine if that money is going to solutions shown to lead to long-term recovery more often. We did this investigat­ion to serve as watchdogs over your tax dollars and help our readers navigate the complex systemof treatment providers.

This story is part of our Path Forward initiative in which we dig into our community’s most pressing issues.

Our investigat­ion shows:

■ Medication-assisted treatment using FDA- approved drugs to wean patients off opioids is administer­ed by a wide range of doctors and facilities that fall under various agencies’ oversight and licensing or certificat­ion requiremen­ts.

■ Clinics or doctors who see fewer than 30 patients at a time don’t have to be state- certified and comply with the stringent standards of thosewho treat more people and are certified. That also means they aren’t being inspected regularly like larger providers andthe state relies on complaints to police them.

■ Cash or self- pay clinics have opened as demand for addiction treatment has increased. They often charge asmuch as $250 outof-pocket for an initial visit, services that would be free to the patient if they qualify for Medicaid, and often don’t provide much counseling or other supportive therapies shown to reduce relapse rates.

■ Widely accepted medical standards say medication treatment should always be done with other methods like counseling, cognitive behavioral therapy and/or peer supports. But there is no requiremen­t that a MAT-licensed doctor do that. They are supposed to refer patients to other providers or support groups and doc- ument whether the patient attends. No one routinely checks if doctors are complying with those requiremen­ts.

■ The Ohio Department of Medicaid couldn’t provide data on howmuch it spends on treatment or MAT drugs at certified versus non-certified providers.

■ Suboxone, the brand name for one of the treatment drugs, is being sold or traded for other drugs on the streets and in jails at Medicaid’s expense. Suboxone is highly available on Dayton streets and it’s been increasing, according to the most recent Ohio Substance Abuse Monitoring Network report. The drug is coming from legal prescripti­ons sold illegally on streets.

■ Informatio­n about how to fifind quality care and who is certified for various services can be difficult to fifind, especially on publicly accessible websites. For example, the only publicly available list of doctors who can prescribe Suboxone is outdated and includes a half dozen physicians who have lost their medical licenses and at least two who are dead.

Under direction from the state legislatur­e, the State Medical Board of Ohio is working to update its rules for all MAT providers.

The newrules will tighten limits on how much Suboxone can be prescribed in the fifirst 90 days, specify the types of counseling services a patient should get, and require patients to get more frequent urine tests to prove that their using the drug and not selling it. Those not meeting the standards would be subject to action against their license.

The board continues to review the proposed rules but they’re expected to be adopted in some form in early 2019.

“Wewant patients across the state to be able to be in quality environmen­ts where they can experience successful recovery,” said Dr. Rick Massatti, Ohio’s designated opioid treatment authority at the Ohio Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services.

The updated rules will better define best practices, he said, recognizin­g that illegal diversion of MAT drugs happens.

“We’ve got tobe careful it’s not just throwing money at the thing and not providing the kind of, I’d call it, almost wrap-around services that you see in successful programs,” said U.S. Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio.

Massatti and others said they are in favor of expanding options beyond the large certified treatment centers because not every patient needs or wants the “Cadillac” treatment.

“We are trying to find a point of equilibriu­m,” said Dr. Stuart Leeds, an assistant professor of familymedi­cine at the Wright State University Boonshoft School of Medicine and a practicing physician. If regulation­s are too strict, he said, “access would suffer badly, and people would just not get treatment at all.”

Federal money expanded access

In 2016, as opioid- related deaths began to soar to record levels in Ohio, the state’s treatment capacity lagged. The Health Policy Institute of Ohio ranked the state’s ratio of medication-assisted treatment providers to overdose deaths as the third lowest in the nation that year.

So Ohio used some of the $26million it received from the federal Cures Act in fiscal year 2017 to train more doctors in addiction treatment.

Suboxone is themost common of several brand names for tablets or fifilms that combine buprenorph­ine with naloxone. It blocks withdrawal symptoms. It can cause a high but is weaker than her- oin or methadone and has a ceiling where taking more won’t have any efffffffff­fffect.

Suboxone has become the most popular MAT drug among doctors because it doesn’t have the abuse potential of methadone, which can only be administer­ed at federally regulated facilities.

Federal wa ivers for doctors, nurse practition­ers and other medical profession­als to prescribe buprenorph­ine products were authorized under the Drug Addiction Treatment

Act of 2000 and are referred to as DATA 2000 waivers.

Ohio had only about 250 doctors who’d gone through the training to get the waivers as of 2015.

“We really had limited access to MAT,” Massatti said.

Now Ohio has more than 1,050 physicians who have received waivers.

Not all clinics take insurance

A quick web search for “Dayton Suboxone clinic” will net thousands of results for doctors who have opened their own shops to address the opioid epidemic. These clinics must have DATA 2000 waivers and staff with active medical licenses, but no other certificat­ion as long as each prescriber treats no more than 30 patients.

If a prescriber treats more than 30 patients, they must get an additional license from the Ohio Board of Pharmacy. That license comes with more scrutiny — mandatory background checks for employees, regular inspection­s and requiremen­ts that prescriber­s check the state’s prescripti­on database regularly and do urine tests to determine patient compliance.

About a dozen clinics are operating in the Dayton area without such a license by staying under the patient limit. The Board of Pharmacy is responsibl­e for investigat­ing complaints of someone going over this limit.

The state mental health board has an additional certificat­ion for centers that offer services such as counseling and in-patient treatment, which has similar levels of scrutiny to the pharmacy board license. The smaller clinics aren’t required to get that certificat­ion either.

Some of these non-licensed, non-certified clinics accept Medicaid and private insurance and some don’t.

“There are Suboxone providers that are kind of going outside of Medicaid all together,” Leeds said.

These clinics — which charge patients hundreds of dollars out-of-pocket — are under even less scrutiny because the department of Medicaid isn’t looking at what services are being billed to catch any abnormalit­ies.

In some cases clinics are charging cash for a visit to get a Suboxone prescripti­on, but then the patient fills the prescripti­on using Medicaid.

“I know for a fact that’s happening because my patients have reported it to me more than once,” Leeds said. “To me that strikes me as sort of failing in our primary mission here, which is to take care of people.”

Other doctors and treatment providers in the area have reported the same story from patients and said they are concerned about the quality of care people are getting when they simply Google Suboxone clinics and find one with walk-in appointmen­ts and cash payments.

“It’s often medication without the treatment,” said Wendy Doolittle, CEO of McKinley Hall, a state-certified treatment center in Springfiel­d.

“The prescribin­g of medication is what got us into this mess,” said Jade Chandler, president of Woodhaven Residentia­l Recovery Center in Dayton, a state-certified facility that uses some MAT for withdrawal management but focuses much more on behavioral therapy.

A 2017 study of opioid treatment providers in Ohio by Dr. Ted Parran of St. Vincent Charity Medical Center in Cleveland found that cash clinics may be prescribin­g more than 16 mg of Suboxone per day, which is the typical dose prescribed by clinics that take insurance.

“That then really becomes a moral and ethical issue for prescriber­s if requiring large amounts of cash for visits is associated with prescribin­g higher doses of an opiate that has a street value and can be diverted in order to generate money perhaps for office visits,” Parran said earlier this year.

Patients need to be better educated that they don’t have to go that route and that they can get help signing up for Medicaid or other health insurance to cover treatment, Leeds said.

“That’s kind of a scam operation and they need to do a little shopping to find out that this care is available and that it’s affordable,” he said.

The Dayton Daily News attempted to contact cash clinics in Montgomery County, including going to the listed addresses, but they didn’t return multiple calls for comment or were no longer operating at those locations. Many others listed online had disconnect­ed phone numbers.

Some patients might prefer a self-pay option, Massatti said, because they don’t want to comply with the stricter counseling requiremen­ts that might accompany insurance coverage.

It’s unclear how much diversion of Suboxone is happening from those paying cash and those using Medicaid or other insurance providers.

Treatment providers and users surveyed for the most recent Ohio Substance Abuse Monitoring report on drug abuse trends in Dayton said Suboxone is being sold in the parking lot of many clinics in the area for about $20 per 8 mg strip. One treatment provider stated in the report, “There are a lot of shady clinics, and people know where they are, and they know how to get it.”

Investigat­ions and lost licenses

Suboxone clinics have been investigat­ed, along with doctors being suspended or losing their licenses for not following MAT rules.

In July of 2016, the Ohio Attorney General’s Office and the Drug Enforcemen­t Agency raided the Springfiel­d office of Reasonable Choices Inc., which was a state-certified MAT clinic at the time.

Dr. Richard Potts permanentl­y surrendere­d his medical license in April 2017 in lieu of further investigat­ion into allegation­s of failing to maintain minimal standards of care.

Attorney General Mike DeWine’s office said the case is still open, but the clinic’s director Brenda Griffith said the business has since gained an internatio­nal accreditat­ion, state certificat­ion and approval to bill Medicaid. They now operate at a different location in Clark County and have three doctors and a physician assistant who each have waivers to do MAT.

She defended clinics that accept cash payments, which Reasonable Choices does while also accepting Medicaid and other insurance, as offering an option for clients who are working and can’t make multiple visits per week for counseling.

“We don’t want to overdo it,” she said. “We find the best fit for the patient.”

The Dayton Daily News investigat­ion also found more than a dozen doctors statewide who are listed as having active buprenorph­ine prescribin­g waivers, but have either lost their medical license or been discipline­d for violations related to prescribin­g practices.

Neither state nor federal authoritie­s were able to provide informatio­n on when doctors were granted their waivers so it’s unclear if they were issued before or after the disciplina­ry action.

Responsibl­e clinics should be checking regularly and randomly whether their clients are actually taking the Suboxone prescribed to them, experts said, whether they are self-pay or accept insurance.

Reasonable Choices in Clark County maintains a relationsh­ip with the Moorefield Twp. police so that they are alerted if a client gets in trouble for selling Suboxone, Griffith said. They do mouth swabs, urine and blood tests and random pill counts to prevent misuse of the MAT drugs they prescribe.

“We do take a lot of precaution­ary measures,” Griffith said.

Complaint-driven system

If the updated state MAT guidelines are approved and go into effect early next year, there still won’t be any routine monitoring in place to make sure non-licensed and non-certified clinics are operating up to the new standards.

The Ohio Board of Pharmacy inspects only the larger facilities it licenses and conducts checks of the state’s prescribin­g database to see if anyone is going over their patient limit — 30, 100 or 250 depending on their level of waiver.

Any other investigat­ions into substandar­d care at the smaller, unlicensed clinics would need to be initiated by a complaint from another prescriber, a patient or a family member, according to Ali Simon, public and policy affairs liaison for the pharmacy board.

Ohio has taken steps to promote greater access to MAT and put into place strong safety measures to ensure responsibl­e treatment, the Ohio Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services said in a statement.

That includes strengthen­ing the Ohio Automated Rx Reporting System (OARRS) that tracks prescripti­ons, including buprenorph­ine.

“Any abnormal prescribin­g patterns are discernabl­e through OARRS,” the statement says. “The Ohio State Board of Pharmacy investigat­es suspicious activity and refers cases to the State Medical Board for disciplina­ry action.”

To ensure that Medicaid spending on medication assisted treatment is appropriat­e, Ohio Medicaid has a robust program integrity unit, the statement also says, which works closely with the Ohio Attorney General’s Office’s, Ohio Auditor of State, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and managed care plans.

“This coordinate­d approach has been nationally recognized as a best program integrity practice,” the statement says.

The state mental health agency also is using a portion of its federal grant funding to provide one additional investigat­or to the State Board of Pharmacy.

Suboxone treatment likely isn’t the money grab that pill mills once were, Leeds said, although he’s unsure what kind of profits cash clinics bring in. Instead, he believes that many doctors choose to operate the smaller, less scrutinize­d clinics to help people get started with treatment in the least restrictiv­e environmen­t in the hopes they’ll follow through with counseling in time. But that’s likely to lead to relapses, Leeds said.

“It’s a feel-good thing that’s probably not going to work,” he said.

Montgomery County’s Alcohol Drug Addiction and Mental Health Board recommends that people seeking treatment go to state-certified facilities that offer cognitive behavioral therapy in addition to medication and the board only contracts with those facilities.

“Access to medication will relieve the person of the physical and some of the psychologi­cal stress of addiction, but it doesn’t change the person’s long-term thinking and feelings that drive their behaviors,” said Jodi Long, director of treatment and supportive services for the Montgomery County board. “You always want a combinatio­n.”

 ?? BILL LACKEY / STAFF ?? An evidence bag full of Suboxone and drug parapherna­lia at the Clark County Sheriff’s Office. Addiction treatment drugs like Suboxone are being sold illegally on local streets and in jails.
BILL LACKEY / STAFF An evidence bag full of Suboxone and drug parapherna­lia at the Clark County Sheriff’s Office. Addiction treatment drugs like Suboxone are being sold illegally on local streets and in jails.
 ?? TYGREENLEE­S / STAFF ?? Jade Chandler, president ofWoodhave­n Residentia­l Treatment Center (left), talkswith residentia­l assistantM­andy Andrews . Chandler says Woodhaven uses somemedica­lly assisted treatment forwithdra­walmanagem­ent but focusesmor­e on behavioral therapy.
TYGREENLEE­S / STAFF Jade Chandler, president ofWoodhave­n Residentia­l Treatment Center (left), talkswith residentia­l assistantM­andy Andrews . Chandler says Woodhaven uses somemedica­lly assisted treatment forwithdra­walmanagem­ent but focusesmor­e on behavioral therapy.
 ?? TY GREENLEES / STAFF ?? Because Woodhaven Residentia­l Treatment Center in Dayton has 96 beds, it must be state certified, which means more stringent standards and regular inspection­s. The state relies on complaints to police the smaller providers who see fewer than 30 patients at a time.
TY GREENLEES / STAFF Because Woodhaven Residentia­l Treatment Center in Dayton has 96 beds, it must be state certified, which means more stringent standards and regular inspection­s. The state relies on complaints to police the smaller providers who see fewer than 30 patients at a time.

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