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Impact of medicaid waivers on medication for opioid use disorders in residential facilities: Evidence from twenty-five states.

Created on 02 Jul 2026

Authors

Pricila H Mullachery, Dominic Hodgkin, Recai Yucel, Maureen T Stewart

Published in

Drug and alcohol dependence. Volume 286. Pages 113242. Jun 20, 2026. Epub Jun 20, 2026.

Abstract

Medicaid Section 1115 waivers allow states to test demonstration programs with the potential to shape access to care for millions of beneficiaries. The Institutions for Mental Diseases (IMD) waiver enables states to use federal funds to treat substance use disorders in residential facilities, bypassing Medicaid's long-standing IMD exclusion. We assessed the impact of IMD waiver adoption on the use of medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD) by estimating cohort-specific effects among four groups of states that adopted waivers between 2016 and 2019.
We used Treatment Episode Data Set data. Data on the outcome, i.e., MOUD use among opioid-involved treatment episodes, and covariates were linked to data on waiver effective date, extracted from waiver approval documents. We used difference-in-differences to estimate models stratified by treatment setting (residential vs. non-residential) and adjusted for state-level policy indicators, and state- and year-fixed effects.
MOUD use was low, especially among residential admissions, but increased over time from 5% in 2014-18% in 2019. In adjusted models, the cohort of states that adopted a waiver in 2016 showed higher odds of MOUD use in residential settings (OR=1.49, 95% CI: 1.21-1.84) relative to the comparison group. However, this pattern was not replicated for the later cohorts. Finally, waiver adoption did not have an impact on MOUD use in non-residential settings.
In early adopter states, IMD waivers might have facilitated MOUD use in residential facilities, but their effects varied across cohorts.

PMID:
42385582
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 02 Jul 2026.

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