Many Black, Latino people can't get opioid addiction med. Medicaid cuts may make it harder.
Sep. 8—Pharmacies in Black and Latino neighborhoods are less likely to dispense buprenorphine — one of the main treatments for opioid use disorder — even though people of color are more likely to die from opioid overdoses.
The drug helps reduce cravings for opioids and the likelihood of a fatal overdose.
While the nation as a whole has seen decreases in opioid overdose deaths in recent years, overdose deaths among Black, Latino and Indigenous people have continued to increase.
Many medical and health policy experts fear the broad domestic policy law President
About 7.5 million of the people who will lose coverage under the new law are covered by Medicaid. Shortly before Trump signed the bill into law, researchers from the
Because Black and Hispanic people are overrepresented on the rolls, the Medicaid cuts will have a disproportionate effect on communities that already face higher barriers to getting medications to treat addiction.
From 2017 to 2023, the percentage of
But researchers found the drug was much less likely to be available in pharmacies in mostly Black (18% of pharmacies) and Hispanic neighborhoods (17%), compared with mostly white ones (46%).
In some states, the disparity was even worse. In
The researchers found buprenorphine was least available in Black and Latino neighborhoods across nearly all states.
Barriers to treatment
Dr.
In addition to its federal classification as a controlled substance, buprenorphine is also subject to state regulations to prevent illegal use. Pharmacies that carry it know that wholesalers and distributors audit their orders, which dissuades some from stocking or dispensing it.
"If you don't address these dispensing regulations, or regulate buprenorphine from the aspect of pharmacy regulations, people are still going to encounter barriers accessing it," she said.
Medicaid covers 47% of nonelderly adults who suffer from opioid use disorder.
In neighborhoods where at least a fifth of the population is on Medicaid, just 35% of pharmacies dispensed buprenorphine, Qato and her team found. But in neighborhoods with fewer residents on Medicaid, about 42% of pharmacies carried the drug.
Medicaid covers nearly half — 47% — of nonelderly adults who suffer from opioid use disorder. In states that expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act, another recent study found an increase in people getting prescriptions for buprenorphine.
"Medicaid is the backbone of care for people struggling with opioid use disorder," said Cherlette McCullough, a
Qato said the shortage of pharmacies in minority communities is likely to get worse, as many independent pharmacists are already struggling to stay open.
"We know they're more likely to close in neighborhoods of color, so there's going to be even fewer pharmacies that carry it in the neighborhoods that really need it," she said.
'There needs to be urgency'
Qato and her colleagues say states and local governments should mandate that pharmacies carry a minimum stock of buprenorphine and dispense it to anyone coming in with a legitimate prescription. As examples, they point to a
"We need to create expectations. We need to encourage our pharmacies to carry this to make it accessible, same day, and there needs to be urgency," said
"In many of the conversations I have with pharmacies, when I'm getting some pushback, I have to say: 'Hey, this person's at the highest risk of dying right now. They need this medication right now.'"
She said patients frequently become discouraged due to barriers they face in getting prescriptions filled. The Bridge Center has been expanding its patient navigator program across the state, and helping other states start their own. The program helps patients identify pharmacies where they can fill their prescription fastest.
"There's a medication that can help you, but at every turn it's really hard to get it," she said, calling the disparities in access to medication treatment "unacceptable."
Trotzky-Sirr, the
"A lot of our patients are able to obtain medications for treatment of addiction like buprenorphine, because of the state covering the cost of the medication," said Trotzky-Sirr, who also is a regional coordinator at the Bridge Center.
"They don't have the resources to pay for it, cash, out of pocket."
Some low-income patients switch between multiple providers or clinics as they try to find care and coverage, she added. These could be interpreted as red flags to a pharmacy.
Trotzky-Sirr argued buprenorphine does not need to be monitored as carefully as opioids and other drugs that are easier to misuse or overuse.
"Buprenorphine does not have those features and really needs to be in a class by itself," she said. "Unfortunately, it's hard to explain that to a pharmacist in 30 seconds over the phone."
More is known about the medication now than when it was placed on the controlled substances list about two decades ago, said
Pharmacies are fearful of regulatory scrutiny and don't have "countervailing pressure" to ensure patients get the treatments, he said.
On top of that fear, Medicaid managed care plans' prior authorization processes may also be adding to the pharmacy bottleneck, he said.
"Black and Latino communities have higher rates of Medicaid enrollment, so to the extent that Medicaid prior authorization techniques are a hassle to pharmacies, that may also kind of discourage them [pharmacies] from stocking buprenorphine," he said.
In some states, buprenorphine is much more readily available. In
In contrast, less than a quarter of pharmacies in
"We're going to see more people becoming unhoused, because without treatment, they're going to go back to those old habits,"
Stateline reporter
This story was updated to include
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