California Invests More Resources in Programs to Treat Opioid Use Disorders

SACRAMENTO – California continues to invest in community-based programs to address the opioid epidemic. The Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) today awarded $1.5 million to 20 organizations to expand Medication Assisted Treatment (MAT) across California, and requested applications for grants totaling $3 million to tackle substance use in Tribal and urban Indian communities.

“We view everything we do through a lens of equity. These two projects are examples of our greater commitment to health equity as we continue expanding support and care for individuals with substance use and opioid use disorders,” said DHCS Director Michelle Baass. 

WHY THIS IS IMPORTANT: Drivers of systemic inequities in behavioral health care include the criminalization of substance use, racism, and structural barriers to health services. This creates a treatment gap, as only 5 percent of people with a substance use disorder (SUD) receive treatment for their conditions in any given year. Closing this treatment gap requires directly addressing systemic inequities in behavioral health care and intentional health equity investments in community health center-based SUD treatment programs.

Grant Awards: ATSH Equity Collaborative

Awardees will receive funds from February 28, 2023, to June 30, 2024, to implement the Addiction Treatment Starts Here Equity-Centered Community Learning Collaborative (ATSH Equity Collaborative). Entities include health center sites in California that provide comprehensive primary care services with established MAT programs to an underserved population. The program funds will support community health centers’ treatment of SUD. They will also work to address, and ultimately eliminate, SUD inequities by expanding MAT care with an equity and racial justice approach that strengthens partnerships between clinics and their community partners.

Request for Application (RFA): Tribal and Urban Indian Community-Defined Best Practices Program

The California Tribal MAT (TMAT) Project is designed to meet the opioid use disorder (OUD) and SUD needs of California’s Tribal and urban Indian communities. A component of the TMAT project, the Tribal and Urban Indian Community-Defined Best Practices program will support best-practice knowledge exchange for the enhancement of services for the prevention and treatment of, and recovery from, OUD and other co-occurring SUDs in Tribal and urban Indian communities. Tribal entities may apply to receive up to $150,000 from May 1, 2023, through May 31, 2024, to support the identification of cultural and traditional healing and recovery practices and their integration into developing or existing Tribal and urban Indian health programs for substance use prevention, treatment, and recovery services.

These projects are funded by the State Opioid Response III grant awarded by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. They are part of DHCS’ broader efforts to address SUD, collectively known as the California MAT Expansion Project, to increase access to MAT, reduce unmet treatment need, and reduce opioid overdose-related deaths through the provision of prevention, treatment, and recovery activities.

For more information about efforts to expand MAT, visit California MAT Expansion Project Overview. Learn more about the California MAT Expansion Project.

ABOUT MAT: MAT is the use of medications in combination with counseling and behavioral therapies, which is effective in the treatment of OUDs, and can help some people to sustain recovery.

ADDITIONAL BACKGROUND: Since coming into office, Governor Gavin Newsom has dedicated more than $1 billion in funding to fight the opioid crisis by removing opioids from the streets, providing resources to California communities in need, and increasing education and awareness to prevent harm in the first place.

In fiscal year 2022-23, DHCS is investing more than $558 million in various opioid prevention and treatment grant activities. Today’s grant and RFA announcements are just two of several efforts made by DHCS in recent months to tackle SUDs/OUDs, including $2.4 million for the MAT in Jails and Drug Courts Project$2 million for the California Native MAT Network for Healing and Recovery Project$4 million to 54 driving under the influence programs for resources and treatment$52 million invested in opioid prevention and treatment services$12 million to tackle youth opioid use$3.4 million to transform medical practices to address the opioid crisis, and $58.5 million for youth substance use prevention

California MAT Expansion Project in the News

During an ABC 10 segment, Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) Chief of the Community Services Division, Marlies Perez, spoke about the impact of the opioid epidemic on the State of California and how DHCS is combating this crisis. Marlies highlighted the role that fentanyl has played in the epidemic, explained what opioid use disorder (OUD) is, and emphasized that medication-assisted treatment (MAT) can help people who are struggling with OUD.

DHCS Announces New Funding to Help Expand Medication Assisted Treatment For Opioid Use Disorders

Awards will help counties, jails, and drug courts and Tribal programs offer resources and effective treatment to those in need

SACRAMENTO – The Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) recently awarded nearly $2.4 million to 29 counties as part of the Medication Assisted Treatment (MAT) in Jails and Drug Courts Project, part of its continued efforts to address the opioid crisis. Grants and stipends are being provided to counties to support the development or expansion of access to MAT for opioid use disorders (OUD) in jails and drug court systems.

“DHCS is committed to ensuring that justice-impacted individuals, those residing in DHCS-licensed facilities, and Native groups receive evidence-based MAT. These projects will assist county jails and drug courts, substance use disorder facilities, and Tribal and Indian health programs with applying promising practices to engage individuals with an OUD and provide MAT,” said DHCS Director Michelle Baass.

Added State Medicaid Director Jacey Cooper: “Through these efforts, our state and county partners will be better positioned to support the delivery of MAT during the pre-release period and improve care coordination so that individuals can continue MAT care and receive the services they need as they re-enter the community.”

The MAT in Jails and Drug Courts Project will continue California’s efforts to expand access to MAT for OUD in jails and support implementation of the newly approved California Advancing and Innovating Medi-Cal (CalAIM) justice-involved initiative, which will offer a targeted set of Medicaid services, including MAT, to youth and adults in state prisons, county jails, and youth correctional facilities for up to 90 days prior to release. The funding opportunity will serve as a key resource to support correctional facilities to offer MAT and facilitate warm hand-offs and linkages to community-based MAT providers.

DHCS also released a funding opportunity to improve and expand access to MAT for individuals with an OUD in nonprofit DHCS-licensed residential substance use disorder (SUD) facilities. Additionally, DHCS is making funds available to California Tribal and urban Indian health programs to implement the Native MAT Network for Healing and Recovery Program.

Why This Matters

The primary goal of all DHCS opioid-related projects is to ensure equity and inclusion for all populations while reducing opioid-related overdose deaths and increasing access to MAT, as well as easing unmet harm reduction, focusing on prevention, and meeting treatment and recovery service needs.

MAT in Jails and Drug Courts

This project brings together county teams in a learning collaborative to improve coordination among county agencies and providers who serve justice-impacted county residents and to develop bridges to further build system capacity to ensure access to effective treatment and recovery supports. Grant funds and participation stipends were made available through this project to all California counties interested in developing or expanding access to MAT for OUD in their jails and drug court systems.

MAT in Jails and Drug Courts is part of the California MAT Expansion Project, which aims to increase access to MAT, reduce unmet treatment need, and reduce opioid overdose-related deaths by investing in OUD and SUD services. It currently supports 30 projects in California, including a focus on increasing services for vulnerable and underserved populations who are more at risk of developing an OUD and/or SUD. Counties participating in the project will receive technical assistance through individualized monthly coaching, topic-specific webinars, and quarterly learning collaboratives.

This project builds upon the previous Expanding Access to MAT in County Justice Settings and County Touchpoints for Access to MAT for Justice-Impacted Individuals and complements the Systems of Care project, all funded through federal State Opioid Response (SOR) I and II grants. From 2018 to 2022, 39 counties participated in these projects, representing 67 percent of California’s counties and 83 percent of the state population.

More information on these previous projects, as well as a list of counties participating in the MAT in Jails and Drug Courts project, can be found on the Addiction Free CA webpage. Funding will continue through June 2025.

Native MAT Network for Healing and Recovery

On February 6, DHCS released a funding opportunity to implement the California Native MAT Network for Healing and Recovery Program from May 1, 2023, through May 31, 2024. California Tribal and urban Indian health programs may apply to receive up to $150,000 to develop, implement, sustain, and enhance MAT services for opioid addiction and receive technical assistance and peer knowledge.

DHCS is increasing culturally competent OUD treatment services in California Tribal and urban Indian communities. Funding is intended for these groups that reflect the racial, ethnic, and cultural community they intend to serve, and that can develop culturally responsive services that are tailored and individualized to the population of focus.

“When the community sees that the local MAT program incorporates the importance of culture and consistently integrates Native context into the service approach, they may be more likely to reach out for help,” said Marlies Perez, Chief of DHCS’ Community Services Division.

MAT in Residential Treatment Facilities

The primary objective of this funding opportunity is to improve and expand access to MAT for individuals with an OUD in DHCS-licensed residential SUD facilities. This will be done by supporting costs associated with recruitment, mentorship, training, and other activities to increase provider knowledge and comfort with providing MAT through a collaborative learning opportunity for facilities to implement best practices.

Senate Bill 992 (Chapter 784, Statutes of 2018) and Senate Bill 184 (Chapter 47, Statutes of 2022) require all DHCS-licensed SUD facilities to either offer onsite MAT or have an effective referral process in place. For DHCS-licensed SUD facilities to offer MAT services, they must receive approval to provide incidental medical services (IMS). Despite having IMS approval, many DHCS-licensed SUD facilities do not offer onsite MAT.

Funding opportunities will be available to incorporate MAT into facilities not already providing MAT, expand MAT services in facilities that already provide MAT, and create MAT “Centers of Excellence” to provide mentorship and technical assistance to other facilities and projects funded through this opportunity. This project is funded by the state General Fund and is also part of the California MAT Expansion Project.

For more information on efforts to expand MAT, visit the California MAT Expansion Project Overview.

ABOUT MAT: MAT is the use of medications in combination with counseling and behavioral therapies, which is effective in the treatment of OUDs, and can help some people to sustain recovery.

ADDITIONAL BACKGROUND: Since coming into office, Governor Gavin Newsom has dedicated more than $1 billion in funding to fight the opioid crisis by removing opioids from the streets, providing resources to California communities in need, and increasing education and awareness to prevent harm in the first place.

In fiscal year 2022-23, DHCS is investing more than $558 million in various opioid prevention and treatment grant activities. Today’s grant announcements are just two of several efforts made by DHCS in recent months to tackle SUDs/OUDs, including:

Low-Barrier Opioid Treatment at Syringe Service Programs RFA

The Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) has released a request for applications (RFA) to support syringe service programs (SSP) to implement projects offering low-barrier access to treatment of opioid use disorder (OUD), as well as related supportive services such as case management and peer support. This opportunity will fund approximately 30 organizations that operate low-barrier OUD treatment projects. Applications are due by December 19, 2022, at 1:00 p.m. (PST). 

New applicants may apply for a minimum of $200,000 and a maximum of $352,000 for the 16-month contract period. Partners with continuation contracts through March 31, 2023, may apply for a minimum of $200,000 and a maximum of $330,000 for their projects.

The goals of this funding opportunity include implementing low-barrier treatment to:

  • Integrate opioid treatment services into existing sites and other harm-reduction services to increase the number of SSP sites where OUD treatment services are available and the number of SSP participants engaged in treatment.
  • Reduce the risk of fatal and nonfatal opioid overdose.
  • Support people who wish to reduce, modify, or eliminate their injection drug use or their illicit drug use in general.
  • Integrate harm reduction concepts and strategies with opioid treatment programs or providers to increase trust and treatment retention, including for people who have experienced stigma and discrimination in health care settings.