CHERRY HILL, NJ. (AP) -- The federal
government will spend a record $4.6 billion this year to fight the
nation’s deepening opioid crisis, which killed 42,000 Americans in 2016.
But some advocates say the funding included in the spending plan the
president signed Friday is not nearly enough to establish the kind of
treatment system needed to reverse the crisis. A White House report last
fall put the cost to the country of the overdose epidemic at more than
$500 billion a year.
Former U.S. Rep. Patrick Kennedy, a Democrat who served on President
Donald Trump’s opioid commission last year, said there are clear
solutions but that Congress needs to devote more money to them.
“We still have lacked the insight that this is a crisis, a cataclysmic
crisis,” he said.
By comparison, the Kaiser Family Foundation found the U.S. is spending
more than $7 billion annually on discretionary domestic funding on AIDS,
an epidemic with a death toll that peaked in 1995 at 43,000.
States also have begun putting money toward the opioid epidemic. The
office of Ohio Gov. John Kasich estimates the state is spending $1
billion a year to address the crisis. Last year, New Jersey allocated
$200 million to opioid programs, and the budget proposal in Minnesota
calls for spending $12 million in the coming fiscal year.
A spokesman for Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker, a Republican who also
served on the Trump commission, said the federal government still needs
to do more.
“Governor Baker encourages members of Congress to work together on a
plan forward to fully fund the bipartisan recommendations,” spokesman
Brendan Moss said.
The commission’s chairman, former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie,
declined through a spokesman to comment.
The opioid allocation is part of the $1.3 trillion budget appropriation
Trump signed Friday. In a budget deal full of compromises, this was one
element both parties heralded.
Addiction to opioid painkillers, including prescription drugs such a
Vicodin and OxyContin and illicit drugs such as heroin and fentanyl, is
causing deep problems across the country. It’s being blamed for
shortened life expectancies, growing burdens on foster care systems, and
strains on police and fire departments.
The budgeted response amounts to about three times as much as the
federal government is spending currently to address the epidemic, not
counting treatment money that flows through Medicaid and Medicare. A
spokesman for the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services said
the agency does not track how much money it spends on drug treatment.
“This bill provides the funding necessary to tackle this crisis from
every angle,” U.S. Sen. Roy Blunt, a Missouri Republican who is chairman
of a subcommittee overseeing much of the funding, said in a statement.
“It’s another major step in our effort to get this epidemic under
control and save lives.”
The biggest chunk of new money in the congressional appropriation — $1
billion — is to be distributed to states and American Indian tribes.
States with the highest overdose mortality rates would receive larger
shares, a provision that’s important to hard-hit states with small
populations such as West Virginia and New Hampshire. Every state would
receive at least $4 million.
The plan also includes $500 million for opioid-related research and
hundreds of millions more to expand treatment availability.
Andrew Kolodny, the co-director of an opioid policy research group at
Brandeis University, said he believes it would take a 10-year commitment
to funding $6 billion annually to build a system that would make
medication-assisted treatment accessible to everyone who needs it. |
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