Description:
On May 16, 2018, the House Committee on Ways and Means ordered seven bills to be reported related to the nation’s response to the opioid epidemic. Because the bills are related, CBO is publishing a single comprehensive document that includes estimates for each piece of legislation.
H.R. 5776, the Medicare and Opioid Safe Treatment Act of 2018, would appropriate $8 million in 2019, which would be available until expended, for Federally Qualified Health Centers and Rural Health Clinics to support training in the treatment of opioid use disorder. CBO expects that $8 million would be spent between 2019 and 2021.
H.R. 5776 also would expand the availability of medication-assisted treatment (MAT) for Medicare beneficiaries with opioid use disorder. The bill would allow treatment programs certified by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) to become Medicare-participating providers. H.R. 5776 also would direct the Secretary of HHS to create a new schedule of bundled payments for MAT through certified programs and grant the Secretary considerable discretion for defining bundles and establishing payment rates.
CBO projects that, beginning in 2021, about 3,000 Medicare beneficiaries who would not be treated for opioid abuse under current law would newly enroll each year in treatment offered by SAMHSA-certified programs and that the annual cost per participant would range from about $6,000 to about $10,000, depending largely on the medications dispensed and the period for which beneficiaries adhered to the protocol. CBO’s projection of the number of beneficiaries who would receive treatment takes into consideration the number of beneficiaries estimated to have opioid-use disorder, the number already receiving some form of treatment, and the availability of providers to treat those who newly enroll in MAT. To develop a per capita treatment cost, CBO analyzed rates for MAT paid by other payers, as well as Medicare spending for health care services typically used by people receiving MAT.
CBO estimates that enacting H.R. 5776 would increase net Medicare spending by $243 million over the 2019-2028 period. (If enacted, H.R. 5776 would also affect spending subject to appropriation; CBO has not completed an estimate of that amount.)
H.R. 5776, in section 3, would require Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), beginning on January 1, 2020, to review and possibly modify payments made through Medicare’s Hospital Outpatient Prospective Payment System for certain opioid and nonopioid pain management treatments and technologies. CMS could revise payments if the Secretary of HHS determined that there was a financial incentive to use opioids in place of non opioid medications. The budget neutrality requirement under current law would apply to such revisions, and the rest of the payment rates within the system would be subject to offset ting adjustments. Because the changes would be made in a budget-neutral manner, CBO estimates that this provision would have no budgetary effect.
Section 6 of H.R. 5776 would explicitly authorize the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI) to test approaches for expanding beneficiaries’ awareness of psychological services and to help those beneficiaries curtail use of hospital-based mental health or behavioral health services. Because CMMI already has that authority, CBO estimates that enacting the legislation would not affect federal spending.
H.R. 5776 would direct the Secretary of HHS to report to the Congress on the availability of supplemental benefits to pay for treatment or prevention of substance abuse among enrollees in Medicare 8 Advantage plans. The Secretary also would report on coverage of and payment for pain treatment and substance use disorders under Medicare. CBO estimates that producing those reports would cost $1 million over five years.
CBO has determined that provisions in H.R. 5776 would increase authorization levels, but has not completed estimates of amounts. Any spending that would result from those authorizations would be subject to future appropriation action.
CBO estimates that although enacting H.R. 5776 would increase net direct spending and on-budget deficits over the four consecutive 10-year periods beginning in 2029, those effects would not exceed the threshold established by the Congress for long-term costs ($2.5 billion for net direct spending and $5 billion for on-budget deficits).