Analysis: Cost of Treating Opioid Addiction Rose Rapidly for Large Employers as the Number of Prescriptions Has Declined
A new Kaiser Family Foundation analysis finds that while the use of prescription opioids among people with employer-based health coverage has declined to its lowest levels in over a decade, the cost of treating addiction and overdoses has increased sharply.
The annual cost of treating opioid addiction and overdose – stemming from both prescription and illicit use — has increased by more than eight-fold since 2004, from $0.3 billion dollars to $2.6 billion in 2016.
Among people with an inpatient episode, the average inpatient expenses for opioid addiction treatment totaled $16,104 per year in 2016, up from $5,809 in 2004.
A majority (53%) of spending paid for the treatment of enrollees’ dependent children.
In addition to providing data on opioid misuse spending, the brief highlights general trends in the use of opioids among people with employer-based coverage. It finds:
Opioid use peaked in 2009, when 17.3 percent of large employer plan enrollees had at least one opioid prescription during the year. By 2016, that number dropped to 13.6 percent.
Opioid prescription use is highest among older enrollees, with 22 percent of people age 55-64 having at least one opioid prescription in 2016.
Opioid use is higher among people in the South (16%) than in the Midwest (14%), West (12%) or the Northeast (11%).
The issue brief and a related chart collection are available on the Peterson-Kaiser Health System Tracker, a partnership between the Peterson Center on Healthcare and the Kaiser Family Foundation that monitors the U.S. health system’s performance on key quality and cost measures.
METHODOLOGY
The analysis is based on a sample of health benefit claims from the Truven MarketScan Commercial Claims and Encounters Database to calculate the amounts paid by insurance and out-of-pocket on prescription drugs from 2004 to 2016. A sample of between 1.2 and 19.8 million enrollees per year was used to analyze the change from 2004 to 2016 in opioid-related spending and utilization.