SUSANNAH LUTHI August 22, 2019
The Trump administration on Thursday unveiled
long-anticipated proposals to pare back extra privacy regulations
around addiction that critics claim have exacerbated overdose rates in the
opioid epidemic.
Senior officials described these regulations,
known as CFR Part 2, as "so complex" they have deterred clinicians
from getting involved in treating addiction despite the escalating need.
Under revisions proposed by the Substance Abuse
and Mental Health Administration and introduced by HHS Secretary Alex Azar and
his deputies, records of a substance abuse disorder and treatment would no
longer be subject to the extra privacy laws that pre-date HIPAA.
Primary care doctors will be able to note their
patients' addiction treatment history in their regular, HIPAA-protected patient
records. The goal is to harmonize behavioral and primary health treatments and
expand the number of clinicians who can move into treating addiction.
Another proposed change would clear hurdles for
patients with addictions who want to claim Social Security benefits. Currently,
anyone subject to the Part 2 privacy restrictions has to contact a specific
employee within the Social Security Administration before filing a claim. Under
the SAMHSA proposal, the claim can be generally transmitted to the agency.
Rules around scrubbing patient data would also
be relaxed. Currently, any doctor who has treated a patient with an addiction
must "sanitize" his or her phone if the patient happens to send a
text. In the new regulation, the provider would only have to delete the text
message.
Azar touted the move as a major part of the
Trump administration's push to peel away burdensome regulations, as well as the
fight to curb the opioid epidemic. The opioid crisis loomed large in the
regulatory language that described the proposed changes.
"The prompt revision of this rule is
necessary to help address one of the largest drug crises in the nation's
history," SAMHSA said in the proposed rule, citing "extensive
information concerning the nature and magnitude of the crisis" compiled by
HHS and the Justice Department.
"We want addiction care to expand,"
HHS Assistant Secretary Elinore McCance-Katz told reporters.
The proposed rule won't satisfy all calls for
reform of the Part 2 protections. Azar said officials went as far as they
believe they can under law with these changes.
Hospitals and other groups have been calling for
a total overhaul that would align the Part 2 protections with HIPAA laws. That
would require congressional action.
In 2018, as House and Senate committees
negotiated major opioid legislation, a core group of lawmakers tried to get
this reform included but ultimately failed in the face of major opposition from
some leading members of Congress and groups like the American Medical
Association.
But the AMA has backpedaled on its opposition,
and sponsors of that bill are hoping to try again before the end of the year.
Two leading House Republicans took the
opportunity on Thursday to reiterate their own support for a legislative
change.
"This builds on our efforts last Congress,
when the House overwhelmingly passed the Overdose Prevention and Patient Safety
Act, which unfortunately was not taken up in the Senate," Reps. Greg
Walden (R-Ore.) and Michael Burgess (R-Texas) of the House Energy and Commerce
Committee said in a statement. "We welcome the administration's
partnership in this effort with today's announcement. But passing this
legislation into law is the best way to fully and permanently ensure healthcare
providers can effectively treat patients with substance use disorders."
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