US will let more people take methadone at home
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[September 21, 2024]
By CARLA K. JOHNSON
The first big update to U.S. methadone regulations in 20 years is poised
to expand access to the life-saving drug starting next month, but
experts say the addiction treatment changes could fall flat if state
governments and methadone clinics fail to act.
For decades, strict rules required most methadone patients to line up at
special clinics every morning to sip their daily dose of the liquid
medicine while being watched. The rules, built on distrust of people in
the grip of opioid addiction, were meant to prevent overdoses and
diversion — the illicit selling or sharing of methadone.
The COVID-19 pandemic changed the risk calculation. To prevent the
spread of the coronavirus at crowded clinics, emergency rules allowed
patients to take methadone unsupervised at home.
Research showed the looser practice was safe. Overdose deaths and drug
diversion didn’t increase. And people stayed in treatment longer.
With evidence mounting, the U.S. government made the changes permanent
early this year. Oct. 2 is the date when clinics must comply with the
new rules — unless they're in a state with more restrictive regulations.
Alabama — where about 7,000 people take methadone for opioid use
disorder — plans to align with the new flexible rules, said Nicole
Walden, a state official overseeing substance use services.
“This is a step toward the country — and everybody — saying this is not
a bad thing,” Walden said. “People don’t have to show up every day to
get a medication that can help save their lives.”
Is methadone an opioid?
Methadone, an opioid itself, can be dangerous in large amounts. When
taken correctly, it can stop drug cravings without causing a high.
Numerous studies have shown it reduces the risk of overdose and the
spread of hepatitis C and HIV. But it cannot be prescribed for opioid
addiction outside of the nation's 2,100 methadone clinics, which on a
given day treat nearly 500,000 U.S. patients with the drug.
The new federal rules allow stable patients to take home 28 days’ worth
of methadone. Colorado, New York and Massachusetts are among states
taking steps to update their rules to align with the new flexibility.
Some others have not, including West Virginia and Tennessee — the states
with the nation’s highest drug overdose death rates.
“Where you live matters,” said University of Arizona researcher Beth
Meyerson, who studies methadone policy.
Phoenix resident Irene Garnett, 44, would welcome more take-home
methadone doses. Her clinic now requires her to come in twice a week,
even though she's been a patient there more than 10 years, "which is
just bonkers,” she said.
Garnett, who works as a grant manager for a harm reduction agency, lives
25 minutes away from the clinic. She said 28 days of take-home
methadone, the maximum allowed under the new federal rules, would give
her more freedom to travel and a “more normal quality of life.”
“This is the only medication where you have to disrupt your life by
going someplace every day,” she said.
Under the new rules, which Arizona plans to embrace, clinics will have
broad discretion about which people qualify for take-home doses.
Ideally, such decisions will be made jointly between doctors and
patients. But money will play a role too, experts said.
Frances McGaffey, who researches substance use treatments for the
nonprofit Pew Charitable Trusts, said payments to clinics are sometimes
tied to in-person dosing, which can discourage take-home treatment.
"States should be looking at their payment policy and see what kind of
care they’re incentivizing,” she said.
In Arizona, clinics now get $15 per in-person dose from the state's
Medicaid program vs. about $4 per take-home dose. The state is
considering options including making those amounts equal or adopting
what’s called “bundled payment,” a model that reflects the overall cost
of treatment.
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Methadone patient Irene Garnett, 44, of Phoenix, takes her treatment
at a clinic in Scottsdale, Ariz., on Monday, Aug. 26, 2024. (AP
Photo/Ross D. Franklin)
New York's Medicaid program uses a
bundled payment model so there's no financial incentive for
in-person dosing.
Longtime methadone patient David Frank, a 52-year-old New York
University sociologist, gets four weeks of take-home methadone in
wafer form from his clinic.
“I never in a million years could have gone back to school, got my
Ph.D., done research or taught — any of that stuff — if I had to go
to a clinic every day,” Frank said. “It’s night and day in terms of
your ability to live a stable, happy, quality life.”
A movement to ‘liberate methadone’
The methadone clinic system dates to 1974, when the U.S. saw fewer
than 7,000 overdose deaths a year. Some longtime patients —
including Garnett and Frank — are organizing a movement to “liberate
methadone” as annual overdose deaths now top 107,000. They support
legislation to allow addiction specialist physicians to prescribe
methadone and pharmacies to fill those prescriptions.
The new federal rules don't go that far, but they include other
changes, such as:
— In states that adopt the rules, methadone treatment can start
faster. People will no longer need to demonstrate a one-year history
of opioid addiction.
— Counseling can be optional instead of mandatory.
— Telehealth can be used to assess patients, improving access for
rural residents.
— Nurse practitioners and physician assistants — not just doctors —
can start people on methadone.
“It really is up to states to adopt these changes in order to
increase access to care,” said Mark Parrino, president of the
American Association for the Treatment of Opioid Dependence.
Tennessee officials have drafted new rules that are stricter than
the federal government's. The state's proposal would increase random
urine drug screening, make counseling mandatory for many patients
and obligate clinics to hire pharmacists if they want to dispense
take-home doses.
The state's proposed rules "are duplicative, contradictory,
prescriptive, rigid, and written in a way that seeks to punish
versus heal people living with an opioid use disorder,” wrote Zac
Talbott, who operates four methadone clinics in Tennessee, Georgia
and North Carolina.
In states that do adopt the federal rules, the changes will be a
heavy lift for some clinics, experts said. Some clinic leaders may
disagree with the patient-centered philosophy behind the changes.
Some may balk at the legal liability that goes with judgment calls
about which people can safely take methadone at home.
“Not all opioid treatment programs are created equal,” said Linda
Hurley, CEO of Rhode Island’s oldest methadone program, CODAC
Behavioral Healthcare.
Clinics are used to operating within a highly restrictive
environment, said Meyerson, the University of Arizona researcher.
“We have regulated them into a corner for years,” Meyerson said. The
new rules allow the clinics to put the well-being of patients at the
center of care.
“The question is," she said, "can they do it?”
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