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North Country Sen. Ritchie introduces bill that could help heroin addicts kick habit

Posted 2/5/16

Addicts desperate to break free from heroin’s deadly grip would get more doctor-ordered treatment, under new legislation introduced in the legislature by Senator Patty Ritchie, R-Heuvelton, and …

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North Country Sen. Ritchie introduces bill that could help heroin addicts kick habit

Posted

Addicts desperate to break free from heroin’s deadly grip would get more doctor-ordered treatment, under new legislation introduced in the legislature by Senator Patty Ritchie, R-Heuvelton, and Assemblyman Al Stirpe, D-Cicero.

The bill, S.6478-A, would require insurers to cover up to 90 days of inpatient treatment for drug abusers.

Current law requires coverage for inpatient treatment, but it does not establish a time limit, and doctors, abusers and family members all have pointed to examples of addicts finding themselves back on the street before they are fully healed, according to Ritchie

“In public hearings, and from the personal accounts of addicts, their doctors and families, I’ve heard too often about abusers who want to quit, but are forced to leave treatment too soon, before they can truly escape from the downward spiral of drug addiction because they cannot afford to remain in treatment,” said Ritchie, a member of the Senate’s Task Force on Heroin and Opioid Addiction.

Access to treatment was a central issue identified by the Senate Task Force in helping to stem the alarming growth of heroin overdose and deaths. New laws enacted last year dramatically expanded access to treatment, but still do not go far enough to help recovering addicts live their lives drug-free, according to Ritchie.

Recent statistics from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show 47,055 people died from drug overdoses in the United States in 2014, 61 percent involving heroin. Since 2010, heroin overdose deaths have tripled.

“In addition, the CDC also reports that some of the most significant increases in heroin use are occurring in demographic groups with historically low rates of heroin use, namely women, the privately insured and those with higher incomes,” Ritchie said.