<p class="first" id="P1">At least 2.3 million people in the U.S. have an opioid use
disorder, less than 40%
of whom receive evidence-based treatment. Buprenorphine used as part of medication-assisted
treatment has high potential to address this gap because of its approval for use in
non-specialty outpatient settings, effectiveness at promoting abstinence, and cost
effectiveness. However, less than 4% of licensed physicians are approved to prescribe
buprenorphine for opioid use disorder, and approximately 47% of counties lack a buprenorphine-waivered
physician. Existing policies contribute to workforce barriers to buprenorphine provision
and access. Providers are reticent to prescribe buprenorphine because of workforce
barriers, such as (1) insufficient training and education on opioid use disorder treatment,
(2) lack of institutional and clinician peer support, (3) poor care coordination,
(4) provider stigma, (5) inadequate reimbursement from private and public insurers,
and (6) regulatory hurdles to obtain the waiver needed to prescribe buprenorphine
in non-addiction specialty treatment settings. Policy pathways to addressing these
provider workforce barriers going forward include: providing free and easy to access
education for providers about opioid use disorders and medication-assisted treatment,
eliminating buprenorphine waiver requirements for those licensed to prescribe controlled
substances, enforcing insurance parity requirements, requiring coverage of evidence-based
medication-assisted treatment as essential health benefits, and providing financial
incentives for care coordination across healthcare professional types—including behavioral
health counselors and other non-physicians in specialty and non-specialty settings.
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