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Long-Term Care Facilities Must Provide Addiction Care, Advocates Say
Health Brief

Long-Term Care Facilities Must Provide Addiction Care, Advocates Say

When you think about the opioid crisis, the image of adults in their 20s, 30s, even sometimes those who are middle-aged, may come to mind. Rightly so, since  occur in people between ages 25 and 64.

But did you know older adults are increasingly at, too?

In fact, from 2021 to 2022, adults over 65 saw the &苍产蝉辫;鈥&苍产蝉辫;10 percent 鈥 in overdose death rates across all age groups.

Yet their addiction care needs are often overlooked, even in places teeming with medical staff, such as long-term care facilities that primarily serve older patients. My colleague Aneri Pattani and I dug into the issue.

One study estimated that older adults were  in 2022 to receive any type of care for opioid use disorder. They were also unlikely to receive medications such as buprenorphine and methadone 鈥 considered the treatment gold standard.

When people think of who actively uses drugs, 鈥渢hey don鈥檛 want to think about grandma, they don鈥檛 think about grandpa, and they certainly don鈥檛 want to think about what could be happening at a nursing home,鈥 said A. Toni Young, executive director of Community Education Group, a nonprofit that advocates on substance use policy.

But Young鈥檚 organization, along with more than 50 other advocacy groups, is working to bring the issue front and center. In  shared exclusively with 国产麻豆精品Health News and the Health Brief, the coalition is urging the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to ensure older patients get the help they need.

鈥淢any Americans living in residential care facilities may not be in a position to effectively advocate for their own medical interests,鈥 the letter says. 鈥淭hey must be able to trust you to hold their facility operators accountable to uphold the law.鈥

Facilities that receive Medicaid and Medicare payments are required to abide by federal laws, including the Americans With Disabilities Act and the Fair Housing Act. The laws bar discrimination due to current or past addiction and mandate appropriate medical care, including .

鈥淗owever, without enforcement, the law is just words,鈥 the letter notes.

To change that, the letter writers urge CMS to 鈥渦ndertake a systematic education, investigation, and enforcement effort, covering all categories of residential care facilities that you oversee.鈥

In a statement to 国产麻豆精品Health News, CMS said its , released this year, require nursing facilities to ensure they have the staffing and resources to care for patients with serious mental illness or substance use disorder. The agency directs facilities to have care plans in place to 鈥減revent adverse events, such as an overdose.鈥 It has also partnered with other federal agencies to  to boost nursing home care for patients with addiction and mental health concerns.

The agency did not directly address how such guidelines would be enforced.


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