Skip to main content

About One-Third of Mental Health Facilities Offer Meds for Opioid Addiction

Medically reviewed by Carmen Pope, BPharm. Last updated on June 20, 2024.

By Elana Gotkine HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, June 20, 2024 -- About one-third of community outpatient mental health treatment facilities (MHTFs) offer medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD), according to a study published online June 18 in JAMA Network Open.

Jonathan Cantor, Ph.D., from RAND in Santa Monica, California, and colleagues quantified the availability of MOUD at community outpatient MHTFs in high-burden states and characteristics associated with offering MOUD in a cross-sectional study. Staff at 450 community outpatient MHTFs (152 Certified Community Behavioral Health Centers [CCBHCs] and 298 non-CCBHCs) in 20 states were surveyed.

The researchers found that 34 percent of MHTFs offered MOUD based on weighted estimates. Self-reporting being a CCBHC, providing integrated mental and substance use disorder treatment, having a specialized treatment program for clients with co-occurring mental and substance use disorders, offering housing services, and laboratory testing were facility-level factors associated with increased odds of offering MOUD (odds ratios, 2.11, 5.21, 2.25, 2.54, and 2.15, respectively). Increased odds of offering MOUD were seen for facilities that accepted state-financed health insurance plans other than Medicaid as a form of payment (odds ratio, 1.95), while reduced odds were seen for facilities that accepted state mental health agency funds (odds ratio, 0.43).

"Outpatient community mental health treatment facilities can be an important part of the treatment ecosystem for individuals with opioid use disorders," Cantor said in a statement. "Further attention is needed to address challenges to offering medication treatment, and to assess whether referral models cited by many of the clinics are effective at meeting patients' needs."

Abstract/Full Text

Disclaimer: Statistical data in medical articles provide general trends and do not pertain to individuals. Individual factors can vary greatly. Always seek personalized medical advice for individual healthcare decisions.

© 2024 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

Read this next

Survival Improves With Open Hysterectomy for Cervical Cancer

FRIDAY, June 28, 2024 -- For patients with early-stage cervical cancer, disease-free and overall survival are lower for patients undergoing minimally invasive versus open radical...

Precision-Guided Treatment Improves Outcomes for High-Risk Pediatric Cancer

FRIDAY, June 28, 2024 -- Precision-guided treatment improves outcomes for children with high-risk cancer, according to a study published online June 6 in Nature Medicine. Loretta...

Only One-Quarter of Adults Who Needed Opioid Use Disorder Meds in 2022 Received Them

THURSDAY, June 27, 2024 -- Only one-quarter of adults who needed opioid use disorder (OUD) treatment in 2022 received medications for OUD, according to research published in the...

More news resources

Subscribe to our newsletter

Whatever your topic of interest, subscribe to our newsletters to get the best of Drugs.com in your inbox.