In 2016, a stunning 42,000 Americans died from opioid overdoses. Opioid addiction has become national news in recent years, as political candidates, medical groups and others have introduced proposals on how to drive down the number of people who are at risk for addiction and overdose.
Some of those efforts have begun to work, due to increased public and medical community awareness, and more intensive medical review and utilization management efforts by payers, pharmacy benefit managers and medical provider networks.
Still, employers have had many reasons to be concerned. The abuse of opioid prescriptions impacts employers through the devastation it can wreak on employees and their families, as well as through the cost impact to employers’ health insurance and workers’ compensation insurance plans.
According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, the cost of treating addiction and overdoses associated with opioids have increased more than eightfold, from $300 million in 2004 to $2.6 billion in 2016.
Despite the success of efforts to drive down the use of opioids in the wake of work-related injuries, the California Workers’ Compensation Institute found last year that opioids are still the most common type of prescription drug used to treat California injured workers with lost-time injuries.
Opioids made up nearly a quarter of the indemnity claim prescriptions in 2017. There is definitely room for improvement.
In the last year, lawmakers have tried to impact the opioid crisis through a series of efforts at the state and federal level to give doctors and payers more tools, and give people with addictions more resources.
Most recently, Congress enacted the Substance Use-Disorder Prevention that Promotes Opioid Recovery and Treatment for Patients and Communities Act, a comprehensive, bipartisan bill addressing the opioid crisis. President Trump signed the legislation into law on Oct. 24, 2018.
The SUPPORT Act is made up of dozens of smaller bills addressing various aspects of the opioid crisis — from coverage to treatment, to research, recovery and law enforcement. It contains a number of provisions aimed at providing better coverage for substance use disorder treatment through the Medicare and Medicaid programs, including expanded coverage for telehealth under those programs.
The SUPPORT Act also has provisions aimed at:
California enacted its own group of new laws aimed at combating the opioid crisis this year. On Oct. 2, the state’s mandate for prescriber use of the Controlled Substance Utilization Review and Evaluation System database went into effect.
Additionally, the following bills were signed into law in 2018:
Additional information on the bills listed above can be found in our comprehensive briefing on state legislation.
In light of the many provisions in the SUPPORT Act that provide funding for research and treatment, it is likely that California lawmakers will continue to introduce bills that take advantage of the opportunity to draw on federal funds to further combat the crisis.
With community groups, researchers, payers, providers, employers and lawmakers all working together to combat the rise in opioid use disorders, we are hopeful that we will soon be able to make a meaningful impact on the crisis.
Amy Donovan is vice president of legislative and regulatory affairs for Keenan and Associates' public agency property and casualty practice in Torrance, California. This entry is republished from Keenan's blog.
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