The American Society of Addiction Medicine Criteria (ASAM) Criteria has profoundly influenced addiction treatment and reimbursement, with its growing toolkit of ASAM CONTINUUM software, ASAM-CARF Level of Care Certification Program, educational programs, and publications. A retrospective accounting shows that the field has made considerable strides, but has far to go. Providers and payers still need to (1) improve consistency in their use of standardized, multidimensional patient assessment; (2) improve flexibility in providing and reimbursing person-centered, individualized services; (3) improve measurement in treatment planning for determination of progress; and (4) focus on outcomes and value in the care they deliver.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe US opioid crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic have sparked innovation in substance use disorder (SUD) treatment such that telehealth, remote monitoring, and digital health interventions are increasingly feasible and effective. These technologies can increase SUD treatment access and acceptability, even for nontreatment seeking, remote, and underserved populations, and can be used to reduce health disparities. Overall, digital tools will likely overcome many barriers to delivery of evidence-based behavioral treatments such as cognitive behavioral therapy and contingency management, that, along with appropriate medications, constitute the foundation of treatment of SUDs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis article is the latest in an annual series analyzing federal funding for health security programs. We examine proposed funding in the President's Budget Request for FY2019, provide updated amounts for FY2018, and update actual funding amounts for FY2010 through FY2017. Building health security for the nation is the responsibility of multiple agencies in the US federal government, as well as that of state, tribal, territorial, and local governments and the private sector.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Healthcare professionals (HCPs) with opioid dependence are at risk for relapse and death, particularly in the first year of recovery; however, maintenance treatment with opioid agonists is controversial in this safety-sensitive group. We evaluated long-term safety, tolerability, and treatment outcomes of injectable, intramuscular, extended-release naltrexone (XR-NTX) in opioid-dependent HCPs.
Methods: This single-arm, multisite, open-label study was conducted in opioid-dependent HCPs who had been detoxified from opioids for at least 2 weeks.