Closing this vital treatment facility is a crisis for Pierce County. Where's the concern? [The News Tribune (Tacoma, Wash.)]
Mar. 28—This should be a bigger deal. It should be something people are talking about. There should be outrage, and even condemnation.
There should have been alarm bells, and there most certainly should be a plan.
Late last week,
What that means is as cold and straightforward as it gets: Until it reopens, most people from
Let me say that again, in slightly different words, because it's that important. In a county of nearly 1 million people — more than 230,000 of which are Medicaid recipients — it's now exceedingly difficult for a person living at or near poverty to begin the process of recovery locally. In order to enter rehab, in many cases — including with alcohol dependency — you have to go through medically supervised detox first. In
There's simply no way it should have come to this, and no way as a county that we should have let it happen.
Think about it: We talk endlessly about how people need treatment, and how it has to be available. We talk about homelessness, crime and all the other problems that addiction has its tendrils around. We argue, we spit and we fight, but one thing we seem to agree on is that people who want help kicking drugs and alcohol should be able to get it, and encouraged to do so.
The truth?
Apparently, we lied. We had our fingers crossed behind our backs the whole time. We didn't mean it.
The issue at MDC — like so many service providers — appears to involve money. Since 2019 Pierce County has relied on a handful of managed care organizations (MCOs) to administer Medicaid funds for behavioral health services, including addiction treatment. Prior to this change,
In some ways that's a fiscally reasonable approach, but there's a glaring problem. When beds aren't occupied — as has been the case at MDC since the pandemic hit, for complicated reasons, none of which involve an actual reduction in their necessity — the money dries up.
As agency spokesperson
"We were struggling to have the detox full every day," Huff told
While it's currently unknown how long the program will be suspended, on its website MDC says it's planning to begin accepting new patients during the second quarter of 2022. Here's hoping.
Until then, there's blame to go around for the dire situation
A big part of the problem is making essential services like drug and alcohol detox dependent on meagerly rationed state insurance funding, which is backwards and speaks poorly of our priorities as a society. But it's also fair to wonder if the agency — which has been led by interim President and CEO
Then there's the larger picture, and the county and city governments who so often talk about helping those in need — and relied on MDC's detox beds to do it. They also deserve tough questions. To date, none have responded in any meaningful way. There have been no vocal calls to action from local elected officials, and no plan to fill the void. Whether it's MDC operating detox beds in
That's unacceptable, particularly given the stakes.
All of this talk of bureaucracy and inaction takes us back to the reality now facing people in
Even when MDC's detox center was operational, taking the first step in recovery was far from pleasant. Unlike the accouterments available to those with fancier insurance plans, there was no ice cream, no soft blankets, no soft lighting. Checking into detox meant getting a ride downtown, standing on a cold front door stoop and repeating your name through a fuzzy call box until someone let you in. You had to want to be there.
Now? Even that option doesn't exist.
At best, drug and alcohol treatment for
At worst, it means not getting treatment at all.
___
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