Pubdate: Sun, 16 Feb 2003 Source: Berkshire Eagle, The (MA) Copyright: 2003 New England Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://www.berkshireeagle.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/897 Author: Jack Dew, Berkshire Eagle Staff Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) CUTBACKS THREATEN DETOX PROGRAMS FOR ALCOHOLICS, ADDICTS PITTSFIELD -- Cuts to state programs that pay for substance abuse treatment will mean hundreds of Berkshire County residents will be unable to pay for inpatient detox stays and psychological counseling, according to local health officials. Gov. Mitt Romney has announced sweeping cuts from a number of state programs in his efforts to erase a $650 million budget shortfall. A host of Medicaid plans that offer health coverage to the state's poor and disabled are being scaled back or eliminated entirely, and medical providers fear the effect on substance abuse programs will be devastating. In Berkshire County, the Thomas McGee Unit of the Berkshire Recovery Center provides the county's sole inpatient detoxification facility where drug addicts and alcoholics can stay while going through painful and sometimes dangerous withdrawal symptoms. From there, patients graduate to Level B care, a six- to 10-day stay in McGee where they undergo addiction counseling. Often, patients are discharged from there to a halfway house. Under Romney's emergency cuts, the state will no longer pay for the inpatient detox visits for a large number of patients, eliminating a program that had covered people who do not have private insurance and weren't eligible for MassHealth, the state's Medicaid program. At the McGee Unit, approximately 310 patients, or 25 percent of its 1,240 admissions each year, are paid for by this program. As well, a decision made by former acting Gov. Jane Swift to eliminate MassHealth Basic on April 1, which would erase the state's only health plan for long-term unemployed adults who are not disabled, means some of the state's neediest people, including many who are homeless, will no longer be eligible for any substance abuse treatment. MassHealth Basic currently covers 16 percent of all admissions to the McGee unit. And Romney's cuts will eliminate all state coverage of Level B treatment, the six to 10 days spent in the hospital after detoxification, meaning almost 60 percent of McGee's patients will no longer have their Level B stay paid for. Level B is also the only treatment that had been offered to crack cocaine addicts, who otherwise don't qualify for detox because the symptoms of crack withdrawal do not dictate that level of care. Providers in Berkshire County believe these cuts are threatening the fragile network of substance abuse treatment that connects counselors, clinics and halfway houses. Without the state coverage, they fear addicts will have no means to pay for their own treatment and nowhere to turn, with a consequent rise in emergency room visits, crime and overdoses. "We see people being put back on the streets without treatment," said Eugene Dellea, president of Fairview Hospital in Great Barrington, as well as of Berkshire Medical Center's Hillcrest campus, where the McGee unit is housed. "These people won't have a shot. Is our treatment successful 100 percent of the time? No, but at least there is an opportunity to work with these people. Now we won't even have that." Statistics from the Massachusetts Bureau of Substance Abuse Services show that inpatient treatment after detox is successful, and that participants have a 36 percent increased rate of employment; a 42 percent reduction in the use of alcohol or other drugs, a 24 percent reduction in further arrests and a 12 percent reduction in their use of hospital emergency rooms. MassHealth programs have been a popular target of cuts made by Romney and Swift: they have capped the Children's Medical Security Plan and eliminated its emergency room coverage, shrunk Medicaid reimbursement rates to hospitals and tightened the income guidelines for other MassHealth plans so that fewer people will qualify for coverage. Hospitals and doctors say the broad range of MassHealth cuts will force them to rely upon the state's beleaguered free-care pool to pay for treatment. That plan, a combination of funds from hospitals, private insurance companies and the state, is projected to lose $165 million this year. While insurance companies and the state contributions to the pool are capped, the hospitals' contributions are not, so they could be asked to foot the entire cost of unpaid-for care if the state doesn't take special action to restore money. Edward Perlac, vice president of the Hillcrest Hospital campus, said inpatient admissions to McGee are up 15 percent this year. "When the economy goes down, people turn toward alcohol and drugs. This is a real problem and there are going to be hidden consequences. With all the other cuts -- the homeless shelter is being cut, services for abused victims -- you just go right down the line and see a domino effect." Calls to Gov. Romney's office on Friday were returned by a spokeswoman for the state's Executive Office of Health and Human Services who had little information about how many people the cuts will affect and where they could turn for care. Subsequent calls to Romney's office for more information were not returned on Friday or yesterday. The elimination of the emergency detox program and the inpatient, Level B postdetox treatment will save a total of roughly $1.3 million, the Executive Office of Health and Human Services spokeswoman said. She did not know how much the MassHealth Basic cuts would save. Dr. Alex Sabo, Berkshire Medical Center's director of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, fears the state's actions will shift much of the burden of these costs onto hospitals, half of which in Massachusetts lost money last year and cannot afford to bear the extra burden. "At what point by making that shift does the actual treatment organization ultimately go bankrupt and become unable to provide the service?" Sabo said. In addition to shifting costs into emergency rooms and intensive care wards, Sabo said the burden will move to the criminal justice system, where incarcerating drug addicts is more expensive than treating them. "What is the net impact of behaving this way?" Sabo said. "It is a statement about your society and the way you are thinking about your people. It threatens those not-for-profits that are trying to provide the care and it is ultimately raising the cost of government because these problems don't go away." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk