Why 80 Percent of Addicts Can’t Get Treatment
Despite the startling rise of heroin and prescription-painkiller addiction in the U.S., most opioid-dependent people aren鈥檛 in treatment. Here鈥檚 why.
- By 听 The Atlantic听 October 13, 2015
听The U.S. is in the grip of an opioid-addiction epidemic, yet 80 percent of people who are dependent on heroin or painkillers are not getting treatment, according to a new research letter published today in the听Journal of the American Medical Association.
Over the past decade, deaths from overdoses of heroin have quadrupled, according to the CDC, and deaths from prescription painkillers have doubled. The two trends are related: Patients who became hooked on prescription painkillers when the drugs were being听听in the 1990s have been switching to heroin, which is cheaper and easier to access in some areas.听听Americans reported having used heroin in 2013.
For the study, researchers from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health analyzed data from 6,770 people who reported on the听National Survey of Drug Use and Health that they were either dependent on opioids or that the drugs’ use was causing problems in their lives.
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The study found that the most common treatments for opioid addiction are self-help groups and outpatient methadone clinics. The authors also found that many places lack sufficient drug-treatment programs, and only 22 percent of addicts received any kind of treatment in the 2009-2013 survey period. Their findings echo听听that found that because of a lack of capacity, there are nearly a million opioid addicts who would not be able to access treatment, even if they wanted to.
What’s more, some state Medicaid programs restrict access to methadone, naltrexone, and buprenorphine, three drugs that ease opioid withdrawal. In 2013, the final year of the data that the authors of the听JAMA听study examined, the American Society of Addiction Medicine found that only 28 states covered all three drugs on their Medicaid programs,听, and some of those who do cover the drugs require prior authorizations and impose lifetime limits.
The treatment limitations may make life particularly difficult for people in states whose laws take a punitive stance toward drug addiction. For example,听听and the District of Columbia have what are called 鈥911 immunity鈥 measures, which protect people who call 911 after experiencing or witnessing an overdose from facing criminal charges. As I reported earlier this year, 18 states consider听听during pregnancy to be child abuse.
Johns Hopkins professor Brendan Saloner, an author of the听JAMA听study, said in a statement that not only should states increase treatment access, they should also fight stigma against addicts. Saloner called opioid addiction 鈥渁 chronic relapsing illness, just like diabetes.鈥
鈥淩eferring to drug users as junkies or criminals keeps people with addiction in the shadows and away from getting help,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey may be open to treatment, but they never seek it out.鈥
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