A Health Affairs study published Nov. 3 examined an increase in states banning prior authorizations in private insurance plans for opioid use disorder medications. It found that from 2015 to 2023, such bans increased from two states to 22, with variations in the scope of the provisions. During that period, seven states established laws prohibiting prior authorization entirely for all OUD medications, while the other 15 states adopted legislation that still permitted prior authorization under certain conditions. Of those 15 states, four transitioned from partial to full bans, and the remaining 11 maintained partial bans, with many broadening the scope of their prohibitions. Researchers said that future studies should investigate the effects of prior authorization bans on access to OUD medications, treatment outcomes and patient preference. 

 

 

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In a letter to the editor published March 3 by KFF Health News, Jim Prister, president and CEO of RML Specialty Hospital and chair of the AHA Post-Acute…
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A KFF survey published today found that people view prior authorization as the biggest challenge beyond costs when navigating the health care system. In terms…
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The AHA Oct. 23 recommended changes to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ Wasteful and Inappropriate Services Reduction model to address…
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The AHA Sept. 29 sent recommendations to the Department of Health and Human Services and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to help ensure…
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HHS awards $1.5 billion in opioid response grants to states, tribal communities The Department of Health and Human Services announced yesterday that it…
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The Food and Drug Administration Sept. 10 released draft guidance on non-opioid treatments for treating chronic pain and reducing prescription opioid misuse.…