1. To create a comprehensive Benchmark plan that will assure maximum tobacco cessation coverage to all populations in Rhode Island:



Similar documents
TOBACCO CESSATION WORKS: AN OVERVIEW OF BEST PRACTICES AND STATE EXPERIENCES

MASSACHUSETTS TOBACCO TREATMENT SPECIALIST TRAINING

Delivery of Tobacco Dependence Treatment for Tobacco Users with Mental Illness and Substance Use Disorders (MISUD)

A Partnership to Establish Tobacco free Mental Health and Substance Abuse Treatment Centers

World Health Organization

Tobacco Cessation and the Affordable Care Act. Jennifer Singleterry Director, National Health Policy American Lung Association

Health Profile for St. Louis City

NEXT STEPS: TREATING TOBACCO AND CREATING HEALTHY MENTAL HEALTH/SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT FACILITY ENVIRONMENTS PART I

INTRODUCTION. Tobacco Prevention & Cessation Program Substance Abuse and Tobacco Cessation Report - March 2011

2014 Assessment of Smoking Policies and Practices in Residential and Outpatient Treatment Facilities in Sonoma County

American Society of Addiction Medicine

Prevention and Public Health Fund: Community Transformation Grants to Reduce Chronic Disease

Disseminating Smoking Cessation Treatment in Community Substance Abuse Programs

Florida Alcohol and Drug Abuse Association. Presented to the Behavioral Health Quarterly Meeting Pensacola, Florida April 23, 2014

Recommendations and Guidelines for Policies & Procedures in. Tobacco-Free

How To Make A Tobacco Free Facility

CQMs. Clinical Quality Measures 101

Health risk assessment: a standardized framework

TREATMENT MODALITIES. May, 2013

Health Care Access to Vulnerable Populations

I. Insurance Reforms and Expansion of Coverage. Implementation Date Plan years beginning on or after six months after passage of the Act.

American Society of Addiction Medicine

Healthy Lifestyle, Tobacco Free and Recovery Lesson for Group or Individual Sessions

Fact Sheet: The Affordable Care Act s New Rules on Preventive Care July 14, 2010

COMPREHENSIVE STATEWIDE TOBACCO PREVENTION PROGRAMS SAVE MONEY

Treatment Approaches for Drug Addiction

Title: Opening Plenary Session Challenges and Opportunities to Impact the Opioid Dependence Crisis

Katherine Record, JD, MPH, MA Senior Fellow, Center for Health Law & Policy Innovation Harvard Law School March 2013

How Will Health Reform Help People with Mental Illnesses?

American Society of Addiction Medicine

IN THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY STATE OF. Ensuring Access to Medication Assisted Treatment Act

Access to Care / Care Utilization for Nebraska s Women

Behavioral Health Services in Chicago The Current Landscape for Mental Health and Substance Use. June 13, 2012

Smoking Cessation Services in Addiction Treatment: Challenges for Organizations and the Counseling Workforce

Behavioral Health Provider Implementation of Whole Health Integrative Treatment Services

WHY THE FDA SHOULD REGULATE TOBACCO PRODUCTS

Armon TERESA C. ARMON 30 Sharon Lane East Schodack NY (518) (C) (518) (W)

An Ounce of Prevention:

Achieving Quality and Value in Chronic Care Management

Smoking Cessation: Treatment Options for Nicotine Addiction

Smoking Cessation Program


Tobacco Treatment Specialist Certification (CTTS) Program Workshop Manual

Iowa s Maternal Health, Child Health and Family Planning Business Plan

HIV/AIDS, Socioeconomic Status, and Life Insurance. The burden of being infected with the life-threatening disease HIV/AIDS

Course Description. SEMESTER I Fundamental Concepts of Substance Abuse MODULE OBJECTIVES

SUBTITLE D--PROVISIONS RELATING TO TITLE IV SEC GRANTS FOR SMALL BUSINESSES TO PROVIDE COMPREHENSIVE WORKPLACE WELLNESS PROGRAMS

"Starting today, every doctor, nurse, health plan, purchaser, and medical school in America should make treating tobacco dependence a top priority.

REVISED SUBSTANCE ABUSE GRANTMAKING STRATEGY. The New York Community Trust April 2003

New Substance Abuse Screening and Intervention Benefit Covered by BadgerCare Plus and Medicaid

Table of Contents. This file contains the following documents in the order listed:

Risk Adjustment: Implications for Community Health Centers

Ass Professor Frances Kay-Lambkin. NHMRC Research Fellow, National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre UNSW

Alcoholism and Substance Abuse

FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY PUBLIC HEALTH TRAINEESHIP (FIU PHT) Collaborative Community-Based Project Ideas

PERFORMANCE MEASURES FOR SUBSTANCE USE DISORDERS: CURRENT KNOWLEDGE AND KEY QUESTIONS

Terri White. Commissioner

BARACK OBAMA S PLAN FOR A HEALTHY AMERICA:

CRITICAL SKILLS FOR OPTIMUM PATIENT CARE: Care Coordination and Health Literacy

South Australian Women s Health Policy

Update January BadgerCare Plus Information for Providers. BadgerCare Plus Overview. Definition of the New Benefit. No.

ACP Analysis of the Essential Health Benefits Bulletin, Issued by the HHS Center for Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight (CCIIO)

LEVEL I SA: OUTPATIENT INDIVIDUAL THERAPY - Adult

Principles on Health Care Reform

Evidence-Based Practice for Public Health Identified Knowledge Domains of Public Health

Smoking cessation programs in substance abuse treatment facilities: A closer look

A Drug Policy for the 21st Century. Office of National Drug Control Policy

Definition of Foundational Public Health Services

VISION MISSION GOAL AND OBJECTIVES

Treatment Approaches for Drug Addiction

VENTURA COUNTY ALCOHOL & DRUG PROGRAMS

Smoking Cessation in People with Severe Mental Illness. Lisa Dixon, M.D., MPH and Melanie Bennett, Ph.D. University of Maryland School of Medicine

Chronic Disease Management for Adults with Serious Mental Illness

Transcription:

POSTION STATEMENT Submitted to the Rhode Island Health Benefits Exchange Submitted By the Public Policy Workgroup of the Statewide Tobacco Cessation Committee on Tobacco Cessation Treatment Benchmarks under the Affordable Care Act March 11, 2013 Following are some thoughts on how Rhode Island could effectively translate Public Health Policy into Comprehensive and Equitable Tobacco Cessation Insurance Coverage. The focus of the tobacco cessation workgroup has been on provision of services to populations that are most marginalized and are disproportionately affected by tobacco use. These disparate populations demonstrate the highest prevalence of tobacco use and could benefit most from a well-defined, comprehensive tobacco cessation benefit within the Essential Health Benefit Benchmark. These goals are informed by clinical practice and evidence-based best practice guidelines identified by the United Stated Public Health Service, Clinical Guidelines for Tobacco Use and Dependence (Fiore, 2018). We feel it is essential that the Health Benefit Exchange Advisory Board of Rhode Island include provider knowledge and experience when defining the Rhode Island Benchmark plan and Exchanges. Our goals are as follows: 1. To create a comprehensive Benchmark plan that will assure maximum tobacco cessation coverage to all populations in Rhode Island: a. Persons on Medicaid and the uninsured average a smoking rate of 32.4% compared to the private insurance population rate of 15.7%; b. Marginalized populations (e.g. mental health, substance abuse and HIV) will create the greatest impact on the exchanges; c. Marginalized populations also represent the more hardened smokers and demonstrate the greatest need for a comprehensive tobacco cessation benefit; d. Requiring smokers to pay higher premiums is a regressive fee requirement that will directly impact the lower income and more vulnerable populations (mental health, substance abuse, elderly). 2. To address the disproportionate prevalence of tobacco use in disparate populations when identifying the state Benchmark and Essential Health Benefit: a. Within behavioral treatment facilities, approximately 80% to 90% of clients smoke (ATTUD Position Paper); b. There is a 25-year mortality gap between people with behavioral health conditions and the general population (ATTUD Position Paper); c. Nicotine dependence is the most prevalent substance abuse disorder among individuals with mental illness (American Psychiatric Associate 1994); d. Tobacco use is associated with worsened substance abuse treatment outcomes (Prochaska 2010); e. 80% of clients in substance abuse treatment express interest in tobacco treatment (Prochaska, 2004);

f. Tobacco use is the leading cause of death in patients with psychiatric illness and addictive disorders (Prochaska, 2010); g. Mental health population (41%) smokes at 2X the rate of normal population (23%) (Prochaska, 2009); h. Individuals with co-occurring mental illness or addictive disorders are now estimated to comprise 44% to 46% of United States cigarette use (Prochaska 2010); i. Persons with mental illness might smoke more frequently and heavily than the general population and they might lack access to cessation services (CDC Vital Signs, February, 12013); j. In the State of New York, the rate of smoking among those reporting poor mental health (32.5%) was 2X the rate of those reporting good mental health (15.7%). k. Persons with any mental illness (AMI) often lack financial resources, face unstable and stressful living situations, and have difficulty coping with withdrawal symptoms. THEY MIGHT ALSO LACK HEALTH INSURANCE, INFORMATION ON THE HEALTH EFFECTS OF SMOKING, AND ACCESS TO CESSATION TREATMENT (Schroeder, 2010). 3. To provide proven best-practice interventions to directly impact disease prevalence among people who use tobacco and within disparate populations: a. 60% of deaths among smokers are attributable to their tobacco use (JHA et al 2013); b. Cigarette smoking remains the most important health hazard (Schroeder, 2013); c. Because smoking has become a stigmatized behavior concentrated among persons of lower socio-economic status, it risks becoming invisible to those who set health policies (Schroeder, 2013); d. Certified Tobacco Treatment Specialists are strategically placed within medical and behavioral healthcare systems and meet professional standards to be compensated as Fee-For-Service providers. i. Recent observations found that tobacco treatment specialists (TTS) were associated with higher quit rates than non-specialist (McDermott et al, Nicotine and Tobacco Research) e. $2.5 trillion is spent annually in the United States on health care due to chronic disease (heart disease, cancer, diabetes), the most prevalent smoking related diseases (Tom Harkin, U.S. Senate, 2013); f. Health hazards due to smoking may undermine benefits of HIV treatment on morbidity and mortality (Lifson, AR and Lando, HA, 2012): i. Over 40% of persons with HIV are current smokers; ii. Health risks of smoking include increases in some HIV-associated infections, cardiovascular disease, some cancers, bacterial pneumonia and other lung disease, and overall mortality. iii. Smoking is a modifiable risk factor that may further reduce morbidity and mortality in persons living with HIV. iv. The health care setting offers a unique opportunity to screen patients for smoking and to counsel them about smoking cessation. g. We are killing people by not acting. Nicola Roxon, former Australian Health Minister.

4. To provide a meaningful and consistent definition of comprehensive tobacco treatment that is evidence-based (Fiore, 2008): a. More fact-to-face contact (intensive evidence based treatment) can yield longer term outcome with demonstrated quit rates of 26.47%at 3 months and 21.73% at 12 months, with 51.02% of patients completing treatment (Sheffer, et al, 2009); b. In-person treatment (group and individual) outperformed quit lines and internet using American Cancer Associate Fresh Start and American Lung Association Freedom from Smoking protocols, with longer retention of hardened smokers (Hughes, 2013); c. Covered benefits should be sufficient in amount, duration and scope to reasonably achieve their purpose (Medicaid regulations for pregnant women 42CFR 440.230(b); d. Individual in-person or phone counseling of at least 4 sessions was 1.3 times higher than that with medications alone with some evidence of greater quit rates with greater intensity of treatment (Hughes, 2013); e. There is evidence that hardening is occurring among smokers seeking treatment and it is important that clinicians be able to demonstrate that counseling is especially helpful to justify treatment to health agencies (Hughes, 2013). f. Compliance with evidence-based treatment is associated with improved treatment outcome, utilizing a 60-minute intake and six (6) weekly 90-minute group sessions. The overall quit rate of 31% at 6 months is higher than the mean overall abstinence rates for higher intensity counseling (22.1%) or treatment involving more than 8 person-to-person treatment sessions (24.7%) reported in the USPHS guideline (Foulds, J. et al, 2006). 5. To align the Essential Health Benefit with the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008: a. Charging higher premiums for smokers is in direct violation of the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008 by creating barriers to treatment based on stigma and the desire of health insurance companies to save short term dollars (Richter, Kimber, 2009); i. Nicotine dependence and withdrawal are well defined diagnoses in the DSM-IV; ii. Tobacco use is a form of drug dependence and mental illness; iii. Tobacco use is the top preventable cause of death in the United States; iv. 59% of people with mental health and substance abuse problems also smoke and will be required to pay higher premiums. This equates to 2/3 of all people who are supposed to be beneficiaries of the MHPAEA will pay higher insurance premiums. 6. To demonstrate the cost-effectiveness of comprehensive tobacco coverage: a. A study completed among Massachusetts Medicaid subscribers in 2010 found that use of a comprehensive tobacco cessation pharmacotherapy benefit was associated with a 46% DECREASE IN HOSPITALIZATIONS FOR HEART ATTACKS

AND A 49% DECREASE IN HOSPITALIZATIONS FOR CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE AMONG BENEFIT USERS; b. The study s authors estimated that for every $1 in program costs, the Mass Health program received an estimated medical savings of $3.12, a return on investment of $2.12 for every dollar spent (Land, Thomas et al, 2010); c. For low-income smokers, removing the barriers to the use of smoking cessation pharmacotherapy has the potential to decrease short-term utilization of hospital services. References: ATTUD Policy Statement, Integrating Tobacco Treatment within Behavioral Health, Disparate Populations Committee. Foulds, J. et al. Factors Associated with Quitting Smoking at a Tobacco Dependence Treatment Clinic. Am. J. Health Behav. 2006; 30(4):400-412. Fiore, MJ. US Public Health Service Clinical Practice Guideline, Treating Tobacco Use and Dependence, 2008. Hall, SM and Prochaska, JJ. Treatment of Smokers with Co-occurring Disorders: Emphasis on Integration in Mental Health and Addiction Treatment Settings. Annual Review Clinical Psychology, 2009; 5:P 409-431. Harkin, Thomas. U. S. Senate (Iowa), Healthier Lifestyles and Prevention America Act (2013). Hughes, J. Efficacy of Adding Counseling to Medications for Smoking Cessation: When is Counseling Justified.ATTUD Blog, 2013. Jha P, Ramasundarahettige C, Landsman V, et al. 21st Century hazards of smoking and benefits of cessation in the United States. New England Journal of Medicine 2013; 368: 341-50. Land, Thomas, et al., Medicaid coverage for tobacco dependence treatments in Massachusetts and Associated decreases in smoking prevalence, PloS One 5(3) (March 5, 2010) Land, T. et al. A longitudinal study of Medicaid coverage for tobacco dependence treatments in Massachusetts and associated decreases in hospitalizations for cardiovascular disease. A Longitudinal Study of Medicaid Coverage for Tobacco.PLoS Medicine, December 2010, Vol. 7 (2). Lifson, Alan R and Lando, HA. Smoking and HIV: Prevalence, Health Risks, and Cessation Strategies. Curr HIV/AIDS Rep (2012) 9:223-230. McDermott, MS et al. Factors Associated with Differences in Quit Rates Between Specialist and Community Stop-Smoking Practioners in the English Stop-Smoking Services. Nicotine and Tobacco Research, (2012) The Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008.

Prochaska, JJ. Failure to Treatment Tobacco Use in Mental Health and Addiction Treatment Settings: A form of harm reduction? Drug and Alcohol Dependence 110(2010) 177-182. Schroeder, SA and Morris CD.Confronting a Neglected Epidemic: Tobacco Cessation for Persons with Mental Illness and Substance Abuse Problems. Annual Review Public Health, 2010; 31: 297-314. Schroeder, SA. New Evidence that Cigarette Smoking Remains the Most Important Health Hazard. New England Journal of Medicine 368; 4 (2013).