Total cost of care associated with opioid use disorder treatment.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2023
Publication Title
Preventive medicine
Abstract
The opioid epidemic in the United States disproportionately affects Medicaid beneficiaries than other groups. This results in a significant financial burden on state Medicaid programs. In this analysis, we investigate the association of medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD) treatment initiation and linkage to ongoing care on overall healthcare costs of Medicaid Fee-for-Service patients. We conducted a retrospective study among adult patients diagnosed with opioid use disorder (OUD) and who had a clinical encounter at a safety-net institution in Denver Colorado in 2020. Three categories of MOUD status of patients were defined: 1) identified with OUD but did not receive MOUD; 2) initiated MOUD but not linked to ongoing treatment and 3) received MOUD and linked to ongoing treatment. Our outcome variable was per-member per-month total healthcare cost. We estimated a multivariable model to test the association between healthcare cost and MOUD status, while controlling for demographic and risk classification variables. We found that in individuals with OUD who initiated MOUD treatment but were not linked to ongoing care had the highest healthcare cost, while those who were linked to ongoing MOUD treatment had the lowest healthcare cost. MOUD treatment is not only effective at addressing the significant morbidity and mortality burden of OUD but also associated with decreased financial cost, which is disproportionately incurred by Medicaid. Additional policy and care delivery changes are needed to focus efforts to improve linkage to ongoing treatment.
Volume
166
First Page
107345
Last Page
107345
Recommended Citation
Toseef MU, Durfee J, Podewils LJ, Blum J, McEwen D, Hanratty R, et al. Total cost of care associated with opioid use disorder treatment. Prev Med. 2023 Jan;166:107345. doi: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2022.107345. PMID: 36370891.
DOI
10.1016/j.ypmed.2022.107345
ISSN
1096-0260
PubMed ID
36370891