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Friday, February 16, 2018

W.Va. Medicaid to cover treatment for addicted babies

Lily's Place (Huntington Quarterly photo by Katherine Pyles)
West Virginia has decided that its Medicaid program will cover treatment for babies born dependent on drugs. The state, which has the nation's highest rate of infants born addicted and the highest rate of drug-overdose deaths, is the first to grant such coverage.

That was welcome news at Lily's Place, a recovery center for infants in Huntington. The 12-bed facility, opened in 2014, is the first of its kind in the U.S. and provides care for about 100 babies each year. The lack of coverage "has been a source of uncertainty for Lily's Place, so we welcome this announcement," Executive Director Rebecca Crowder said in a statement. "This designation will allow us to continue to offer compassionate care to newborns in need."

"Crowder said the hope is to enable more infant drug rehab centers to open nationwide. A bill introduced in Congress last year is aimed at helping such facilities overcome regulatory hurdles and receive Medicaid-service reimbursement," John Raby reports for The Associated Press.

1 comment:

  1. Now, at times the detox procedure may not work and in serious cases, one may have to admit the patient in house here at this top facility offering drug rehab Indianapolis. In serous instances of cocaine, heroin or similar drug abuse they will carry out a 12 step approach under the partial hospitalization program. Now, if the abuse state is not severe and the patient is a working individual, then they also offer outpatient counseling. It is best that you let them asses the specific case and they will resort to the best treatment for abuse.

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