Pubdate: Tue, 09 Mar 2004 Source: Kingsport Times-News (TN) Copyright: 2004 Kingsport Publishing Corporation Contact: http://www.timesnews.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1437 Author: HANK HAYES Crowe, Cochran Want To End TennCare Payments For Methadone SHOULD TENNCARE COVER METHADONE TREATMENT? Two Northeast Tennessee lawmakers don't think so and are trying to stop TennCare from paying for it. Legislation sponsored by state Rep. Jerome Cochran, R-Elizabethton, and state Sen. Rusty Crowe, R-Johnson City, would prohibit methadone treatment providers from being reimbursed by the state's $7 billion-plus expanded Medicaid program on an "as medically necessary" basis. Cochran said he got the idea for the bill after being told by a probation officer that methadone treatment for heroin addicts was reimbursed by TennCare. "I thought that was a little outrageous, so I called TennCare to find out, and sure enough a couple years ago an administrative law judge ruled the state had to reimburse people for their methadone treatment," Cochran said. Cochran said he doesn't have high expectations for passing the bill, which will get its first hearing in a House subcommittee on Wednesday. "I suspect it's not going to make it," Cochran said of the bill. "But I have a big problem with us basically reimbursing people for drug habits." The state's fiscal impact information for the bill says TennCare currently spends about $4.1 million annually on methadone treatment - $2.6 million in federal dollars matched by nearly $1.5 million in state expenses. TennCare spokeswoman Marilyn Elam pointed out methadone is used for more than treating drug addiction. "There's a difference between methadone treatment and the use of methadone as a painkiller," Elam said. "You have some people in the TennCare population who would be using methadone not as a treatment for drug addiction but as a painkiller for their specific medical need." Elam said if the Cochran-Crowe bill is passed by the General Assembly, the measure would have to be approved by the federal government's Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. CMMS spokeswoman Mary Kahn said the federal agency most likely wouldn't approve prohibiting methadone coverage. "The Medicaid statute requires states that offer drug benefits to provide any FDA (Food and Drug Administration) approved drug for medically necessary purposes," Kahn said. The Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured said states like Tennessee have been reluctant to cut some program offerings because any cost reduction at the state level means a loss of federal matching funds. The commission noted Medicaid programs must cover things like inpatient and outpatient hospital services, but drugs fall under optional services. Gov. Phil Bredesen has made prescription drug limits a centerpiece of his "last chance" strategy to restrain TennCare's escalating cost, but Elam said the future of methadone treatment coverage has not yet been addressed. "We're really not at the stage we can tell you whether or not specific drugs will or will not be covered other than the two the governor has brought up - antihistamines and gastric drugs," Elam said. "Methadone is really a behavioral health drug, and it's something we'll be looking at in the entire universe of prescription drug benefits and coverages." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart