
The White House is calling for more
than a billion dollars in funding to transform opioid treatment in the
United States, two top administration officials announced on Tuesday.
Until recently, the heroin treatment industry has been driven by the philosophy of "abstinence," which insists that any form of medication is merely a crutch for an addict, and he or she ought to instead go cold turkey. The opposing view, now being pushed by the established medical community, views medication-assisted treatment that relies on FDA-approved medicines such as buprenorphine and methadone as an addict's best chance of recovery.
The administration pledged on Tuesday to put the weight of federal funding behind medication-assisted treatment, or MAT. Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Burwell and drug czar Michael Botticelli announced an enormous boost in federal funds to combat the spiraling heroin epidemic.
Burwell said the new initiative's aim is "closing the treatment gap." Last January, The Huffington Post published an investigation highlighting the deadly consequences of this gap.
Of the 2.2 million people who need treatment for opioid addiction, "only about 1 million are receiving it," Burwell said, adding that the new funding "would help make evidence-based treatments available to all those seeking help for their opioid dependence. Expanding access to medication assisted treatment or MAT, as it's commonly called, is an important part of our strategy."
The federal government will spend a full $920 million in cooperation with the states most effected by the crisis. The
funds will be doled out "on the strength of [a state's] strategy to
respond to it," according to a statement from the administration.
If a state refuses to embrace MAT,
its application for federal money is unlikely to be approved. While
hard-line advocates of abstinence are unlikely to be persuaded that MAT
is a preferable option, the amount of money at stake will make it much
more difficult to continue opposing it. Another $50 million in National Health Service Corps funding will go to treatment providers to help them implement MAT, and $30 million more will go toward evaluating the effectiveness of treatment programs that employ MAT. Some funding will also be used to provide MAT in prisons.
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