Samantha Arsenault,
Director of National Treatment Quality Initiatives
Shatterproof
More than 42,000
opioid-related overdose deaths last year. Over 2
million people addicted to opioids. Costs to society exceeding $500
billion per year in lost productivity, healthcare, and criminal justice
costs. The tragic opioid-related statistics continue to soar—and so too does
public awareness about this crisis. Newspaper headlines share heartbreaking
stories of loss, advocates work diligently to spread messages of hope,
providers deliver care to those in need even in trying conditions, and the President
declared a public
health emergency. Despite these facts, too few understand that addiction is
a chronic disease, and that decades
of medical research show it can be treated with the same effectiveness as other
chronic diseases.
The
pervasive stigma around substance use disorders has resulted in a fragmented
treatment system that has been geographically, administratively, financially,
and culturally separated from the rest of healthcare. While healthcare
providers are working to reverse the historically engrained infrastructure of
addiction treatment, in which specialty “programs” offer time-limited or
standardized regimens of therapies, and instead move to evidence-based
individualized disease management, a massive gap remains in accessing quality
care.
National Principles of Care
Shatterproof, a
national nonprofit organization dedicated to ending the devastation that
addiction causes families, is working to help close that gap. The organization
is the lead convener of the Substance Use Disorder
Treatment Task Force, a cross-sector stakeholder group working to reduce
barriers to and incentivize addiction treatment practices under the National
Principles of Care. While there is no standard regiment to treat
addiction, these core concepts derived from The Surgeon General’s Report on Alcohol, Drugs, and Health, are
shown by rigorous research studies in multiple settings and with different
populations to improve patient outcomes. The Principles are:
- Universal screening for substance use disorders (SUDs) across medical care settings
- Rapid access to appropriate SUD care
- Personalized diagnosis, assessment, and treatment planning
- Engagement in continuing long-term outpatient care with monitoring and adjustments to treatment
- Concurrent, coordinated care for physical and mental illness
- Access to fully trained and accredited behavioral health professionals
- Access to FDA-approved medications
- Access to non-medical recovery support services
We advance this work by engaging stakeholders at all levels
– from individuals affected by substance use disorders (SUDs), to medical and
criminal justice professionals, to health insurers, researchers and
policymakers – to end stigma and ensure these Principles are delivered in
practice.
Payer-Based Reform
Historically,
many policy and payment systems around addiction treatment were formed on a
basis of stigma, even criminalizing this disease and its treatment. This has
resulted in barriers and constraints, limiting availability of lifesaving care.
Fortunately, more recent legislation and regulatory mechanisms— including
the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA), Affordable Care Act
(ACA), Comprehensive Addiction Recovery Act (CARA), and Twenty-First Century
Cures Act—seek to undo these disparities by expanding treatment and requiring
insurance coverage on par with physical medical conditions. However, adoption
of lifesaving treatment modalities has remained slow.
Recognizing that even change among highly innovative
providers is constrained within existing payment models, Shatterproof’s SUD
Treatment Task Force has identified payment reform as a key catalyst in
advancing the SUD treatment system. Health insurers, confronted with the wake
of the opioid epidemic and equipped with the knowledge that aligning payment
for addiction treatment with evidence-based modalities can yield a positive return
on investment, were also eager to improve access to this care for their
beneficiaries and realized progress could be accelerated by acting together. Thus, the
first deliverable of the Task Force was a publicly signed agreement by seventeen large
insurers, representing over 248 million lives, to recognize and adopt the National Principles of Care.
The agreement among payers included a commitment to
identify, promote, and reward addiction treatment practices that are consonant
with the Principles; to work with the Task Force to monitor and evaluate
implementation strategies; and to learn and share with the other organizations.
The Task Force will support implementation of payer-based strategies around
reimbursement, coverage, benefit design, utilization management, and other
policies that incentivize and remove barriers to quality addiction treatment.
Quality Improvement
Shatterproof is also working with stakeholders to drive adoption
of evidence-based practices consonant with the Principles of Care and to bring
credibility and transparency to the addiction treatment system through quality
measures.
Consistent with the Donabedian model for examining healthcare quality, a team of experts is working to identify structure, process, and outcome measures aligning with the Principles of Care. Like approaches used in other healthcare sectors, the measures will be used to inform provider report cards.
The report cards, which will function as a treatment “rating
system,” are being designed to drive quality improvement among the provider
community, serve as a resource for referral sources, a tool for insurers and
states in making payment and network decisions, and to inform consumer
decisions when seeking care.
Consistent with the Donabedian model for examining healthcare quality, a team of experts is working to identify structure, process, and outcome measures aligning with the Principles of Care. Like approaches used in other healthcare sectors, the measures will be used to inform provider report cards.
For decades, there has been a
call to put consumers in the driver’s seat of healthcare decisions to allow
market forces to spur productivity, innovation, and quality improvement. But
the industry has been slow to make information on quality, cost, and value
transparent and understandable to the average consumer. Combine that with
seeking care in a time of chaos and navigating unscrupulous and sometimes
fraudulent ad-word schemes or patient
brokers, and the consumer can easily fall
prey to sub-par or even harmful interventions. The rating system will provide
reliable information directly to the induvial seeking treatment, or their loved
ones, to make decisions in times of need.
As the Payer-Based Reform and Quality Improvement initiatives develop in tandem, the rating system can be used by payers to implement supply-side strategies that promote value, such as performance incentives, risk-sharing models, and bundled payments.
As the Payer-Based Reform and Quality Improvement initiatives develop in tandem, the rating system can be used by payers to implement supply-side strategies that promote value, such as performance incentives, risk-sharing models, and bundled payments.
While measurement systems have been met with some criticism
and resistance, comprehensive
reviews show they provide value to patients and help improve the quality of
care long term. Other benefits include the notion that the use of measures
improves measurement, and that these systems drive provider and program
level decisions.
Consumer Education and Stigma Reduction
Closing the gap on high-quality addiction treatment also
involves removing the stigma of this disease, and educating consumers about treatment
options. Shatterproof’s grassroots base is one of our greatest strengths and
has been critical to state and federal advocacy successes. Building on the
success of our ambassador
program, Shatterproof has launched the largest national event series focused
on addiction: The Rise Up
Against Addiction 5K Walk/Run. These events unite thousands of supporters
in 11 cities across the country, bringing the disease of addiction out of the
shadows and into the light.
In 2018, Shatterproof will also launch Family
Support Groups, focused on helping families
overcome the chaos and confusion of this disease. Groups led by
clinicians and peers will incorporate modules to debunk common myths and learn
about evidence-based treatment interventions, and most importantly to share
stories, challenges, and triumphs for individuals who have a loved one dealing
with a substance use disorder.
It’s time to change the headlines from a message of tragedy
to one of hope. Addiction is a treatable disease, and through holistic
multi-pronged initiatives, there is hope for recovery as a nation.
Our guest blogger:
Samantha (Sam) Arsenault is the Director of National Treatment Quality Initiatives for Shatterproof. In this role, Sam manages the Substance Use Treatment Task Force, and provides strategic guidance and support to critical stakeholders across sectors to improve the quality of substance use disorder treatment nationally. Sam is an impact-driven public health professional with demonstrated experience managing multi-stakeholder collaborations for systems-level changes and a personal commitment to reduce the stigma around substance use disorders and their treatment. Read her full bio here.
Our guest blogger:
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