CMS News
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 1, 2017
Contact: CMS Media
Relations
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CMS announces new Medicaid policy to combat the opioid crisis by
increasing access to treatment options
Approves
demonstrations in both New Jersey and Utah
Today, the Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services (CMS) announced a new policy to allow states to
design demonstration projects that increase access to treatment for opioid
use disorder (OUD) and other substance use disorders (SUD). CMS’s new
demonstration policy responds to the President’s directive and provides
states with greater flexibility to design programs that improve access to
high quality, clinically appropriate treatment. In addition, CMS is
announcing the immediate approval of both New Jersey and Utah’s demonstration
waivers under the new policy.
Through this updated policy,
states will be able to pay for a fuller continuum of care to treat SUD,
including critical treatment in residential treatment facilities that
Medicaid is unable to pay for without a waiver.
“This new demonstration policy
comes as a direct result of the President’s commitment to address the opioid
crisis and ensure states have immediate relief and flexibility,” said CMS
Administrator Seema Verma. “Previous policies ignored the growing urgency of
the national opioid epidemic and instead put onerous requirements on states
that ultimately prevented individuals from accessing these needed services.
The Trump Administration’s approach reflects the pressing nature of the
issues states are facing on the ground.”
Previously, states had been
required to build out their entire delivery system for SUD treatment while
also meeting rigid CMS standards before Medicaid demonstration approvals
could be granted. The new policy will allow states to provide greater
treatment options while improving their continuum of care over time.
Under the new CMS demonstration
policy, New Jersey will provide a comprehensive and coordinated SUD benefit
to adults and children while also allowing for the continuum of SUD services
provided to Medicaid beneficiaries who reside in residential treatment
facilities. The services covered as part of the SUD benefit will
include residential treatment, withdrawal management, medication-assisted
treatment, peer supports and targeted case management.
“CMS’ approval of New Jersey’s
Medicaid Demonstration will remove a decades-old federal barrier so that
thousands more New Jerseyans with the disease of addiction will have access
to treatment and recovery,” said New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie. “President
Trump acknowledged the need for this policy change when he addressed the
nation last week and declared a national public health emergency. This is a
tremendous step forward in our efforts to aggressively combat the opioid
epidemic and save lives.”
Utah’s program is part of a
broader delivery system reform effort to address the needs of individuals
with SUD, individuals who are chronically homeless, and individuals within
the justice system. The demonstration will also expand access to SUD
treatment to a more complete continuum of services, including previously
excluded residential treatment sites.
"I've always maintained the
role of the federal government should be to provide states with the
flexibility to be innovative in how they operate their Medicaid programs.
Nobody knows how to address the unique challenges we face as a state better
than we do,” said Utah Gov. Gary R. Herbert. “Today's announcement from the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services will allow us to address a
specific challenge - extending health care coverage, including substance
abuse and mental health services, to the homeless population. I applaud CMS
for approving our waiver request, and look forward to getting to work on
providing these critical services."
The new policy also dramatically
enhances the ability for CMS to evaluate how effectively the demonstration
programs are working through the collection of information and data that can
be used to inform CMS on best practices and methods to specifically combat
the opioid epidemic, increasing the agency’s capacity to learn what treatment
delivery methods are the most effective in addressing our nation’s public
health emergency.
Today’s announcement further
builds on a commitment from CMS to partner with states in improving the
Medicaid program and the lives of those it serves. A March 14, 2017 letter
from the Administration to governors expressed this commitment to “ensuring
that states have the tools they need to combat the growing opioid epidemic
that is devastating families and communities” and in developing “a more
streamlined approach for substance abuse treatment.”
To view a copy of the SMD #
17-003 letter to state Medicaid directors, https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/downloads/smd17003.pdf
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Wednesday, November 1, 2017
CMS announces new Medicaid policy to combat the opioid crisis by increasing access to treatment options
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