Congress Eyes Equipping Providers to Combat the Opioid Crisis; The MAT Act
A year ago this month, Representative Paul Tonko introduced H.R. 1348 to the House of Representatives and Senator Maggie Hassan (NH) introduced its companion bill, S. 445, to the Senate. Both of these bills hold the short title “Mainstreaming Addiction Treatment Act of 2021”. The House version boasts 239 cosponsors with the Senate version enjoying 3 cosponsors. Both are supported on a bipartisan basis. The most recent action on the MAT Act is Senate “HELP” (Health, education, Labor, and Pensions) Committee hearing on February 1st, 2022, wherein the committee discussed and heard testimony on issues of mental health amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
End Substance Use Disorder, an issue education campaign endorsing the MAT Act, describes the more than a century old policy of outlawing medication assisted treatment as “outdated” and a moralization of a medical condition. Founded by Erin Shanning after her younger brother, Ethan, experienced a fatal overdose, the organization seeks to educate legislative stakeholders and urge action to adopt a more modern and medicalized approach to substance use disorder. The MAT Act removes the prohibition on providers on prescribing certain medications for the treatment of opioid use disorder maintained in the Controlled Substances Act and entirely removes the necessity for the DEA waiver of this prohibition, known as the “X” waiver. According to ESUD is joined by 418 organizations have either directly supported the MAT Act or have voiced support for eliminating the X waiver, including criminal justice and law enforcement entities. For immediate transparency, Community Access National Network is one of those 418 organizations.
This relatively straight-forward bill would help to expand access to care – especially in rural communities, move public policy into better alignment with research-proven best practices, combat racialized public health disparities, better support families, reduce overdose deaths, and more. Directly, the most immediate and significant impact of the MAT Act is an expansion of providers eligible to prescribe medication assisted treatment, specifically including certain community health practitioners. The only apparent opposition to the MAT Act is a group representing the interests of commercial addiction treatment centers.
With overdose deaths having skyrocketed by at least 20% in 2020, relative to 2019, emphasizing the need to press forward with the MAT Act is the least the Biden administration can do to begin to meet its promises around drug reform and health care access. Mental health and substance use service providers still need more support from the federal government in order to meet the need of the moment. Equipping providers with tools like medication assisted treatment, improving (read: increasing) Medicaid reimbursement rates for the treatment of substance use disorder, working to destigmatize the issue of substance use disorder, and more explicitly issuing Department of Justice guidance to family courts, social service organizations, and employers on protections afforded under the Americans with Disabilities Act for people recovering from substance use disorder are the least in a long list of actions this administration can take today.
If you would like to urge your elected representatives to remove barriers to care for clinically-proven, best practices in harm reduction, follow this link and to add your organization’s name to ESUD’s letter of support for the MAT Act, click here.