Most Medicaid Patients Do Not Receive Life-saving Drugs for OUD

A U.S. study of more than a million Medicaid enrollees, newly diagnosed with opioid use disorder (OUD), finds most – nearly seven in 10 – are not receiving access to potentially life-saving drugs within six months. 

The major gap in access to these medications – vital for those receiving free or low-cost healthcare and needing treatment for a dependency on heroin, painkillers and other opioids – is revealed ahead of looming Medicaid funding cuts, which threaten to further limit access to many various medications.

Full article: Most Medicaid patients do not receive life-saving drugs for opioid use disorder

 

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