Despite New Access To Health Insurance, Drug-Treatment Rates For Ex-Offenders Barely Changed
More emerging prisoners are covered by Medicaid, but they still face barriers in navigating the health system, researchers said.
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More emerging prisoners are covered by Medicaid, but they still face barriers in navigating the health system, researchers said.
According to a new study, the health law鈥檚 insurance expansions have helped more people gain access to mental health services. But racial and ethnic disparities continue.
Deaths from opioid overdoses are on the rise, and we know that because of data on death certificates. States determine who fills them out and what information they record. And that can vary widely.
The FDA could soon approve an implantable form of a drug used to treat opioid addiction. While the approach helped patients avoid relapse in tests, its price may be prohibitive for some, doctors say.
Advocates emphasize peer support and community reintegration for people with behavioral health problems.
Prison helped Richie Tannerhill overcome substance abuse, but that was just the beginning of rebuilding his life.
Dr. Abraham Nussbaum, author of a new book examining the drive toward quality metrics such as checklists, says he fears medicine could become just another job and not a 鈥渃alling.鈥
New research finds that the impact of these mandates varies because of differences in states鈥 coverage requirements and the availability of treatment options.
In 2013 and 2014, people ages 45 to 64 accounted for about half of all deaths from drug overdose, according to the CDC.
Many Americans believe the U.S. isn鈥檛 doing enough to fight prescription painkiller and heroin abuse, reports a Kaiser Family Foundation poll out Tuesday.
New research sheds light on the growing costs to the health care system associated with painkiller and heroin abuse.
Maryland鈥檚 prisons and jails release thousands of inmates each year without helping them enroll in Medicaid, jeopardizing their health and putting communities at greater risk.
Every state except Missouri has a database that doctors can check to see if a person filling a prescription for an opioid is trying to get it from other pharmacies, too.
A California Assembly bill would require creating a mandatory registry for available psychiatric hospital beds, but the state hospital association calls it unworkable.
A reader asks if it鈥檚 fair for his health plan to classify his son鈥檚 treatment by a psychologist as specialty care that requires a higher copayment.
Some say the usual methods 鈥 abstinence and therapy 鈥 may not be enough.
New Hampshire has one of the highest opioid overdose rates and one of the lowest rates of access to treatment.
Some advocates for mentally ill people say the administration鈥檚 action is long overdue.
Seeing more problem gamblers than ever before, the state is investing in education, training and prevention.
One hospital in Connecticut gives babies and moms fighting addiction a quiet room where they can be together as the drugs leave their systems.
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