Why OIG Did This Review
- Combatting the overdose crisis continues to be a National priority.
- As a payor, CMS plays an important role in ensuring that Medicare enrollees have access to medications and services for the treatment of opioid use disorder and to opioid overdose-reversal drugs.
- This report provides data to help CMS and other decision makers target efforts to further combat the overdose crisis.
What OIG Found
- Opioid overdoses among Medicare enrollees increased slightly in 2023 to 53,000.
- With the buprenorphine waiver repealed, more providers ordered buprenorphine for Medicare enrollees in 2023 than in 2022.
- Despite the increase in the number of providers ordering buprenorphine, fewer than one in five Medicare enrollees received any medication to treat their opioid use disorder.
- Differences persist among enrollees receiving medication for their opioid use disorder, including by State; three States—Florida, Texas, and Nevada—had particularly low percentages of enrollees receiving medication.
- More than 750,000 Medicare enrollees received opioid overdose-reversal drugs through Part D in 2023, a record high. Virtually all received naloxone.
- However, with the most commonly dispensed form of naloxone now available over the counter, Medicare enrollees are losing Part D coverage of this form of naloxone, which could lead to higher out-of-pocket costs.
What OIG Concludes
These findings show a continued need for CMS to work to ensure access to both medications for opioid use disorder and opioid overdose-reversal drugs. OIG encourages CMS to implement recommendations we previously made related to these topics.
https://oig.hhs.gov/reports/all/2025/fewer-than-one-in-five-medicare-enrollees-received-medication-to-treat-their-opioid-use-disorder/
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