The AHA and seven other national hospital organizations yesterday voiced strong support for legislation that would allow states to receive federal matching funds for services provided to a Medicaid beneficiary with a substance use disorder in an Institution for Mental Disease. 鈥淪ince 1965, the Institutions for Mental Diseases exclusion has prohibited federal payments to states for services for adult Medicaid beneficiaries between the ages of 21 and 64 who are treated in facilities that have more than 16 beds, and that provide inpatient or residential behavioral health 鈥 SUD and mental illness 鈥 treatment,鈥 the organizations said in a letter to leaders of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which will mark up additional opioid legislation tomorrow. 鈥淭he discriminatory IMD policy was established at a time when SUDs were not considered medical conditions on the same level as physical health conditions. Today, we know that SUD is a brain disease and that successful treatment requires access to the full continuum of care 鈥 namely, inpatient care, partial hospitalization, residential treatment and outpatient services.鈥

Related News Articles

Headline
Data from the Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill shows that health care cuts under鈥
Headline
The House June 4 passed the AHA-supported SUPPORT Act (H.R. 2483) by a 366-57 vote. The legislation reauthorizes key prevention, treatment and recovery鈥
Headline
Sens. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Andy Kim, D-N.J., June 5 reintroduced the SEPSIS Act, legislation which would task the Centers for鈥
Blog
Even before the COVID pandemic, the mental health and wellness of our young people was failing. The pandemic exacerbated the crisis and made it difficult for鈥
Perspective
Public
After approval in the House last week by a one vote margin, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act 鈥 a sweeping package that would enact many of President Trump鈥檚鈥
Headline
A new AHA video highlights how Corewell Health is transforming youth behavioral health care access in rural Michigan through school-based clinics and鈥