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Attorney General Janet Mills joins bipartisan call for Congress to change federal law to make drug treatment more affordable and accessible
October 3, 2017
OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Attorney General Janet Mills joins bipartisan call for Congress to change federal law to make drug treatment more affordable and accessible
?Road to Recovery? Act will make drug treatment options more available to Maine residents
AUGUSTA ? Attorney General Janet Mills, with a bipartisan coalition of 39 Attorneys General and the National Association of Attorneys General, this week called on Congress to pass legislation that changes federal law to make treatment for drug addiction more affordable and accessible for Americans who most need it.
HR 2938 is the ?Road to Recovery? Act. The coalition of Attorneys General sent a letter to the U.S. House of Representatives, describing the national epidemic of heroin and opioid abuse and overdose deaths, and stating: ?? [W]e cannot arrest our way out of this problem, because it is not just a public safety challenge ? it is a public health challenge as well.?
?A recent study reveals that drug overdoses claimed as many as 65,000 American lives in 2016, a 24 percent increase from the year before. Last year saw 376 drug overdose deaths in Maine, and there have been 185 confirmed drug overdose deaths in the first six months of 2017, or one overdose death a day,? said Mills. ?The ?Road to Recovery Act? will create more treatment options, and this bipartisan coalition of Attorneys General strongly supports its passage in Congress.?
The ?Road to Recovery? Act will help increase access to treatment for opioid addiction by removing a more than 50-year-old provision in the Medicaid program that currently acts as a barrier to residential addiction treatment.
The bill addresses the ?Institutions for Mental Diseases? (IMD) exclusion which was created in the original 1965 Medicaid legislation to prevent the funding of large, residential mental health facilities. While the exclusion led to the closure of what were, in many cases, inhumane institutions, it now has the unintended effect of limiting Medicaid funding for residential treatment facilities, which can be one of the most effective ways to treat drug addiction.
The ?Road to Recovery? Act will remove the exclusion for addiction treatment facilities only. This will help open new avenues for addiction treatment while maintaining appropriate restrictions on mental health facilities.
The change in the law is supported by health care providers, insurers, treatment centers, governors of both political parties and the President?s Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis.
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