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Cuts To Medicaid Could Hurt Ohio's Opioid Fight

Ohio Public Radio

An Associated Press analysis shows Medicaid expansion accounted for 43 percent of total Ohio Medicaid spending on substance abuse and mental health treatment. Advocates for the poor worry a proposed amendment in the Ohio Senate's version of the two-year state budget bill cutting Medicaid expansion enrollments would harm efforts to fight Ohio's opioid crisis. Ohio Public Radio's Jo Ingles reports.

Steve Wagner with the Universal Health Care Action Network says many of the Ohioans who have been covered by Medicaid expansion are low income workers who shift in and out of jobs often. He says the freeze on enrollments in Medicaid expansion starting July 1st, 2018 would shut them out. And he says that would be a huge problem when it comes to getting treatment for opioid addicts. 

 

“There was a lot of impact on opioid addicted population because of Medicaid and losing that would be significant damage.”

 

Numbers from the state show Medicaid expansion has helped a half million Ohioans access substance or mental health treatment. Last year, $650 million from that pot was spent to prevent and treat opioid addictions.

Jim has been with WCBE since 1996. Before that he worked as a reporter at another Columbus radio station, and for three newspapers in Southwest Florida.
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