The Palm Beach Post

Study: Health law repeal would hurt opioid fight

200,000 in Florida treated through Obamacare.

- By Tony Pugh Tribune News Service

WASHINGTON — A new study by Harvard Medical School and New York Universit y shows that repealing the Affordable Care Act would cut $5.5 billion a year for substance-abuse and mental health treatment, creating a 50 percent spike in the number of people unable to address their opioid dependence.

The lost funding would have sweeping implicatio­ns as deaths from opioid abuse continue to rise across the nation and local government­s struggle with the effects on their communitie­s.

Repeal without replacemen­t of funds would have “particular­ly adverse effects” on states like Kentucky and Pennsylvan­ia, wrote Harvard health economics professor Richard Frank and Sherry Glied, dean of the Wagner School of Public Service at New York University.

Both states used the health care law’s Medicaid expansion to promote medication-assisted treatment for opioid abusers. Medicaid now pays for 35 percent to 50 percent of all medication-assisted treatment in Kentucky, the study found. In Pennsylvan­ia, it’s 30 percent.

“They would find it much more challengin­g to maintain these evidence-based programs in the face of a repeal of those expansions,” Frank and Glied wrote.

“We estimate that approximat­ely 1,253,000 people with serious mental disorders and about 2.8 million Americans with a substance use disorder, of whom about 222,000 have an opioid disorder, would lose some or all of their insurance coverage” under a repeal of Obamacare, Frank and Glied wrote.

The 21st Century Cures Act boosted funding for opioid treatment by $1 billion over two years, and money to treat serious mental illnesses by about $200 million in 2017. The funding helped provide opioid treatment for some 420,000 people who need it but can’t access or afford it. Repealing the Affordable Care Act would increase that number by more than 210,000, Frank and Glied found.

“The human impact of repealing the Affordable Care Act cannot be overstated,” said a statement from Gary Mendell, CEO of Shatterpro­of, a nonprofit organizati­on that fights addiction. “Four million Americans who are struggling with mental illness or substance use disorders would lose access to CEO of Shatterpro­of

life-saving treatment.”

I n F l o r i d a , whi c h f i l l s 623 opioid presc riptions per 1,000 people, nearly 200,000 get substance abuse treatment through their marketplac­e coverage, the study found.

I n Te x a s , i t ’ s n e a r l y 153,000, and nearly 28,000 in Missouri.

In all three states, care woul d b e j e o p a rd i z e d i f Affordable Care Act repeal slashes federal funding for the subsidies that help marketplac­e plan members pay their premiums.

Linda Rosenberg, CEO and president of the National C o u n c i l f o r B e h a v i o r a l Health, said repeal essentiall­y would leave states “to deal with their increasing addiction and death rates on their own. The opioid epidemic is already taking a massive toll in our communitie­s, and if anything we need more resources, not less.”

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