By Anna Gorman September
8, 2017
Breann Johnson stopped
using heroin on Mother’s Day this year, determined to end her 13-year
addiction. Days later, she began three months of residential treatment in
Riverside, Calif. — all paid for by California’s Medicaid program.
Johnson, who has two
young sons, said other inpatient drug rehab programs had refused to accept
Medicaid, and she knew outpatient care would not be enough to break her habit.
“I couldn’t stop,”
said Johnson, 28. “With my drug, you are either sick all day or you have to do
it to make yourself feel better.”
As the opioid epidemic
burns a path of devastation through communities across the nation, California
is leading the way in revamping treatment for low-income residents like Johnson.
Before this year, the state’s Medicaid program, known as Medi-Cal, covered only
limited and episodic care. Now, it pays for a much broader range of treatment
including expanded access to medications, inpatient beds, individual therapy
and case managers.
The five-year pilot
project, which gives the state flexibility in its use of federal money, was
approved in 2015 by the agency that oversees Medicaid. The California project
officially started earlier this year. Virginia, Massachusetts and Maryland also
have federal permission to expand drug treatment for Medicaid members. Other
states, including West Virginia and Michigan, are seeking it.
California’s drug
rehab overhaul makes it easier for Medi-Cal members to get care and improves
their chances of long-term recovery, state health officials said. It also aims
to reduce costs by decreasing use of emergency rooms and hospitals and keeping
drug-addicted enrollees out of jail and out of the child welfare system.
“It is such a dramatic
change to our substance abuse field,” said Marlies Perez, chief of the
substance use disorder compliance division at the state Department of Health
Care Services. “We turned off one system one day and turned on a whole new
system the next.”
Health officials and
service providers say that with the federal waiver they are finally able to
address addiction as a chronic disease. Instead of simply getting short-term
outpatient care, Medi-Cal beneficiaries can receive ongoing treatment from
detoxification through recovery, tailored to their specific needs.
“The old traditional
way was a rather canned approach to recovery,” said Bruce Copley, director of
the Department of Alcohol and Drug Services in Santa Clara County.
The state does not yet
know how much the changes will cost, because the program is open-ended: Anyone
eligible for the services in the participating counties can receive them. In
previous years, the state has spent about $180 million annually on drug
rehabilitation for Medi-Cal beneficiaries. Perez said the state is only
beginning to receive bills and is hoping to prove to the federal government
that the changes will actually reduce overall costs related to substance abuse.
Drug rehab providers
still fear for the future of Medicaid given the ongoing debate over health care
in Washington, said Tom Eby, clinical director of Whiteside Manor, a nonprofit
residential treatment center in Riverside. If his clients lost their Medicaid
coverage — or the federal government ended California’s drug rehab program — it
could imperil the progress being made, Eby said.
“It would go back to
what it was, with these folks dying on the street,” he said.
Thirty-eight of the
state’s 58 counties have joined California’s Medi-Cal pilot. Riverside and San
Mateo started in February. Other counties, including Los Angeles and San
Francisco, have come on board since.
The big increase in
the availability of residential care is a significant aspect of the program,
since it could reduce the chance of relapse or overdose for those with severe
addictions. Previously, Medicaid did not cover treatment in inpatient rehab
facilities with more than 16 beds. That resulted in long waiting lists.
Inpatient stays typically were paid for by the county, a private insurer or the
person being treated.
In Riverside County,
Medi-Cal recipients used to wait more than two months for a bed. Now, many of
them get one in a day or two, according to Rhyan Miller, the county’s substance
abuse services program administrator.
At MFI Recovery’s
women’s center in Riverside, known as A Woman’s Place,
residents now have access to a licensed vocational nurse, a driver to take them
to appointments and a discharge planner. They can stay 90 days (with a possible
30-day extension) and longer if they are pregnant.
Johnson said she was
grateful to get in without a long wait. If she hadn’t, the Riverside woman
said, “I would either be on the streets or dead.”
Brittany Stearns,
another resident, said her parents had paid $48,000 for an earlier stay at a
private residential treatment center to treat opioid addiction. When she
relapsed three years later, the 32-year-old Palm Springs resident knew her
parents wouldn’t pay for it again.
“I needed help,” said
Stearns, whose 2-year-old daughter, Molly, lives with her at the center. “If
Medi-Cal didn’t pay for this, I am afraid to think about where I would be.”
Johnson and Stearns
both completed their residential treatment and are now getting follow-up
outpatient care.
Perez, of the health
care department, said that although the project is scheduled to run five years,
the state does not intend to return to the old way of doing business. It hopes
to persuade the federal government to continue allowing spending flexibility.
“This is already impacting not only Medi-Cal but other individuals who are
receiving substance abuse disorder services,” she said.
That’s because clinics
have made sweeping changes to meet the new Medi-Cal requirements for
participation, including the recruitment and training of new employees. Counties
are also now using guidelines set by the American Society of Addiction
Medicine— another condition of participation.
When the new program
started, thousands of people called in to a substance abuse line for screening
and referral, said Miller of Riverside County. That was up from fewer than 200
calls the previous month.
“We didn’t expect
this,” he said. “It has been absolutely crazy. The sheer numbers of calls
completely overwhelmed and also excited us.”
At Whiteside Manor,
director Ron Vervick said the additional reimbursement from Medi-Cal enabled
him to hire more counselors, drivers, nurses and intake workers. Many of the
residents at Whiteside are homeless and mentally ill. In the past, he said,
they didn’t get the care they needed.
One resident of
Whiteside Manor, Kendall Jenkins, sought treatment in early May after years of
heavy drinking and drug use that included heroin, methamphetamines and pills —
“anything I could get my hands on.” A former college golfer and hotel valet,
Jenkins, 30, was homeless off and on, and spent stretches living in his car. He
recently left the facility, found work at a hotel and is staying in a
sober-living home nearby.
Jenkins said that when
he learned Medi-Cal would cover his stay at Whiteside, he felt relieved. He was
able to participate in individual counseling and group therapy and said the
center “saved my life.”
Though he still thinks
a lot about using heroin, he knows where he would end up if he did.
“It’s not worth it,”
he said. “I know I can do this.”
KHN’s coverage in
California is funded in part by Blue Shield of California Foundation.
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