New health care draft boosts opioid crisis funding, still slashes Medicaid treatment

does so to a lesser degree. The original bill that passed the House would have cut more than $800 billion from the program. It hasn’t been determined yet, but the number of low-income Americans who lose insurance coverage for their substance use disorder would remain in the millions.

In 2015, the National Survey on Drug Use and Health determined that an estimated 119 million Americans aged 12 and older used prescription psychotherapeutic drugs in the past year, 44.5 percent of the population.

With 1.35 million low-income Americans suffering from an opioid use disorder, widespread first-time use points toward increases in dependence over the coming years, while only 25 percent of those people currently receive treatment. Generally, only 1 in 10 people gets treated for their addiction.

Summary
Article Name
New health care draft boosts opioid crisis funding, still slashes Medicaid treatment
Description
After more than 60 experts — spanning from former White House health officials to respected doctors — showed their opposition to the Senate's health care bill in a joint statement, a new version of the Better Care Reconciliation Act looks to increase opioid funding from $2 billion to $45 billion.
Author
Ryan Beitler
Publisher Name
Addiction Now