The Signal

Continuing fight against opioids

- By Crystal Duan Signal Staff Writer

As the House and Senate advance legislatio­n to address the opioid crisis, several state Medicaid programs will undergo changes.

The House’s efforts have culminated in passing the SUPPORT Act on June 22, standing for Substance Use Disorder Prevention that Promotes Opioid Recover and Treatment for Patients and Communitie­s Act. Meanwhile, the full Senate will vote on the HEAL Act, which stands for the Helping to End Addiction and Lessen Substance Use Disorders Act.

The SUPPORT Act make several changes to state Medicaid programs to address opioid and substance use disorders including:

requiring the establishm­ent of drug management programs for atrisk beneficiar­ies, establishi­ng drug

review and utilizatio­n requiremen­ts and modifying provisions related to coverage for juvenile inmates and former foster care youth.

Altering Medicare requiremen­ts to address opioid use and changing electronic prescripti­ons and post-surgical pain management

requiring coverage for services provided by certified opioid treatment programs and requiring the initial examinatio­n for new enrollees to include an opioid use disorder screening

addressing other opioid-related issues by establishi­ng and expanding programs to support increased detection and monitoring of synthetic opioids

increasing the maximum number of patients that health care practition­ers may initially treat with medication

Rep. Steve Knight, RPalmdale, supported the bill, citing his background of 18 years with the Los Angeles Police Department seeing the opioid crisis in communitie­s.

Knight’s background is also his motivation to join the Bipartisan Heroin Task Force, which in the House helps craft policies.

“I was proud to vote in support of the SUPPORT for Patients and Communitie­s Act, as it also passed the House with wide bipartisan support,” he said on Tuesday. “This bill will increase oversight and accountabi­lity.”

Knight is concerned patients are able to be overprescr­ibed certain medication­s, and wants to improve measures to combat fentanyl and synthetic drugs.

The congressma­n voted to pass multiple bills in the House of Representa­tives designed to combat the growing opioid crisis.

One is to prevent opioid addiction among veterans, which addresses overprescr­iption in military healthcare and goes by the COMBAT Act.

Other legislatio­n includes the Stop the Importatio­n and Traffickin­g of Synthetic Analogues Act, which allowed Attorney General Jeff Sessions to elevate a new dangerous drug to a new ‘schedule’ or classifica­tion even if appears similar to a drug with a different schedule.

H.R. 5009, known as Jessie’s Law, would make sure medical profession­als have access to the health informatio­n history of their patients before making decisions on treatment.

The Veterans Treatment Improvemen­t Act would employ 50 specialist­s for Veterans Justice Outreach to help veterans involved in the criminal justice system to have greater access at Veterans Treatment Courts.

The Synthetic Drugs Awareness Act, H.R. 449, would require the U.S. Surgeon General to report on the public health effects of synthetic drug use by young people aged 12 to 18.

Along with Knight’s bills, 33 other bills have passed through the House to target the opioid crisis.

cduan@signalscv.com

 ?? Courtesy photo ?? A needle kit was confiscate­d during a felony traffic stop near Jakes Way and Palo Verde Place in Canyon Country. The needles are typically used to inject heroin.
Courtesy photo A needle kit was confiscate­d during a felony traffic stop near Jakes Way and Palo Verde Place in Canyon Country. The needles are typically used to inject heroin.

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