CMS NEWS
For Immediate Release
June 28, 2019
Contact: CMS Media
Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS Media Inquiries
Trump Administration Approves Two New State Medicaid
Demonstrations to Treat Substance Use Disorders and Combat National Opioid
Epidemic
The Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services (CMS) announced today that Minnesota and Nebraska have
become the 23rd and 24th states who have received approval under the Trump
Administration for innovative demonstration projects that increase access to
treatment for opioid use disorder (OUD) and other substance use disorders
(SUD).
Under the section 1115
demonstrations, Minnesota and Nebraska are approved to receive Medicaid
matching funds for treatment in facilities that meet the definition of an
institution for mental diseases (IMD). Since announcing a more flexible
approach to these demonstrations through a November 2017 Medicaid policy announcement,
the Trump Administration has accelerated efforts to help states combat the
national opioid epidemic, decreasing overuse and saving lives.
“The Trump
administration is committed to offering a more flexible, streamlined approach
to accelerate states’ ability to expand addiction treatment services during
this national crisis,” said CMS Administrator Seema Verma, “Whereas only a
handful of states were approved for these demonstrations before 2017, our
approach has allowed us to approve nearly 20 more demonstrations in just 18
months.” Under the Minnesota demonstration, Medicaid eligible
individuals will receive enhanced mental health services through Minnesota’s
Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics (CCBHCs). Temporary expenditure
authority will allow CCBHCs to integrate community health care providers to
increase rates of identification, initiation, and engagement in treatment for
SUD.
CMS expects the Nebraska
demonstration will enhance existing substance abuse related services and
offer those services to beneficiaries in more appropriate treatment
locations, including residential facilities. As a result the
anticipated outcome is that more patients will receive a more complete array
of required treatments than before the demonstration.
States will monitor and
report the impact of changes to address SUD and OUD over the course of the
demonstrations. States who have already implemented their programs are
beginning to report positive results. For example, Virginia experienced a 4
percent decrease in acute inpatient SUD admissions during the first 10 months
of implementation, along with a 6 percent decrease in opioid use disorder
inpatient admissions. During the first year, the total number of
prescriptions for opioid pain medications among Medicaid beneficiaries
decreased by 27 percent while the number of prescriptions for non-opioid pain
relievers remained unchanged. In one year of early implementation of the
Maryland demonstration, over 8,000 Medicaid beneficiaries received
residential treatment services.
Expanding access to
treatment for people with opioid use disorder (OUD) is one key strategy
identified in CMS’s Roadmap to Address the Opioid Epidemic, which details
agency efforts in combatting the opioid crisis. More than two million people
suffer from OUD, yet only 20 percent of people with OUD receive treatment.
These demonstrations will allow Minnesota and Nebraska to improve access to
high quality, clinically appropriate treatment for OUD and other SUDs, in
ways that take into account the particular challenges the opioid epidemic has
caused in their respective states. Both demonstrations are approved for a
five year period beginning on July 1, 2019, and ending on June 30, 2024.
For More information
regarding the Minnesota and Nebraska, demonstrations please visit:
States with previously
approved demonstration approvals include Illinois, New Jersey, Louisiana,
Indiana, Kentucky, Utah, Vermont, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Washington,
North Carolina, Wisconsin, Alaska, New Mexico, Kansas, Rhode Island,
Michigan, Massachusetts, Maryland, Virginia, California and West Virginia.
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Tuesday, July 2, 2019
Trump Administration Approves Two New State Medicaid Demonstrations to Treat Substance Use Disorders and Combat National Opioid Epidemic
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