海角大神

How Medicaid cuts may endanger US progress battling opioid addiction

Brandi Hayes, a member of the local Post-Overdose Response Team, meets with resident Shawn Vandernick in Asheville, North Carolina, about his progress fighting an addiction to methamphetamine, May 29, 2025.

Patrik Jonsson/海角大神

July 2, 2025

As she heads out onto the rolling streets of Asheville, North Carolina, Brandi Hayes is moved by a memory of a father she barely knew.

Part of the area鈥檚 5-year-old Post-Overdose Response Team (PORT), she races to emergency calls in a county-owned vehicle. With each rescue attempt, she is reminded of her own father鈥檚 death following a heroin overdose at age 27.

Ms. Hayes鈥 work, like PORT鈥檚 efforts, doesn鈥檛 stop at the 911 calls. The four-unit team follows up within 72 hours to provide support, education, counseling, and linkage to care. Given that Medicaid pays for most opioid treatment here, the government鈥檚 low-income insurance program is intricately linked to PORT鈥檚 mission.

Why We Wrote This

Americans want to help combat drug addiction, within limits. Cuts to Medicaid, which supports many drug-treatment programs, could have community repercussions nationwide.

鈥淢edicaid is a huge part of what we do,鈥 she says.

Now, as Republicans move to limit Medicaid spending 鈥 hoping to rein in government and offset proposed tax cuts 鈥 opioid treatment efforts like those here in Asheville face an uncertain future. It鈥檚 part of a broader controversy around the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, now nearing final approval in Congress. Even among Republicans, the Medicaid cuts are causing tension amid forecasts that millions of Americans could become uninsured.

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Eligibility changes to Medicaid are coming at a for the opioid crisis, according to KFF, a nonprofit that provides nonpartisan reporting on national health policy. Nearly two-thirds of those with opioid addiction who are seeking treatment are on Medicaid, it says.

Some 71 million Americans are currently enrolled in Medicaid, according to recent government data. The proposed changes could result in nearly 12 million more people being uninsured over the next decade. Spending cuts of up to $1 trillion, critics say, would be used to extend tax benefits to corporations and households earning

鈥淵ou might wonder, if it is generally poor, white men who are dying of drug overdoses, why would this administration, which is built on the backs of lower-education white male voters, abandon something that鈥檚 working?鈥 says David Herzberg, co-author of 鈥淲hiteout: How Racial Capitalism Changed the Color of Opioids in America.鈥

Three women and their baby daughters 鈥撀燬andi Fox and Talia (left), Nathalie Demirdjian-Rivest and Helena (middle), and Allison Walker and Savannah (right) 鈥撀爂ather with other MomsRising activists to oppose Medicaid cuts on Capitol Hill in Washington, June 25, 2025.
J. Scott Applewhite/AP

The opioid epidemic contributed to more than in the United States in 2022, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, with some estimated to have some form of opioid use disorder, whether involving a prescription, fentanyl, or heroin.

Progress in reducing overdose deaths

But last year, those overdose deaths dropped 27% nationwide and by a similar amount here in North Carolina, an encouraging sign to front-line workers like Ms. Hayes.

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Aside from PORT鈥檚 response and wraparound services, the decline, she says, is the result of myriad factors, including community saturation of the overdose-fighting drug naloxone, expansion of medication assisted treatment, the worsening quality of heavy street drugs thanks to interdiction efforts, and hesitancy by many to get involved in opioids given to the spike in overdose deaths that affected their communities.

The Trump administration has focused on an array of strategies, including securing borders where the drugs have been trafficked, promoting medical interventions, and disrupting the global pipeline of fentanyl, the opioid at the root of the overdose spike.

鈥淲e will take action to continue to love and cherish the Medicare and Medicaid programs to ensure they are preserved for those who need them most,鈥 says a June 6 executive order signed by President Donald Trump that refers to older people as the primary Medicaid recipients it is focused on. (While older people are covered by Medicare, many also turn to Medicaid due to low incomes.)

For working-age adults, Senate and House versions of the bill include a requirement to work, volunteer, or study 80 hours a month to qualify for enrollment, unless they have an exception.

The bill鈥檚 rollback of eligibility those with addiction disorders seeking treatment. But there are broad concerns about other eligibility and reporting requirements for those with drug problems, whether federal cuts will lead states to cut payments to treatment providers, and the impact of the cuts on rural hospitals, which have been the primary concern for holdout Republicans like Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina.

People in conservative rural areas are often more likely to qualify for Medicaid. But getting help for drug addictions can often be difficult since some conservative states limit the kind of prescriptions that can be used for treatment, as well as what services are available.

鈥淢edicaid is a big, if not the biggest, player, and a huge factor in how people with opioid abuse disorder get care,鈥 says Joshua Lynch, a professor of emergency and addiction medicine at the University at Buffalo Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences in New York. 鈥淩educing access to care following a year where deaths have been reduced is absolutely not the right answer. The opioid epidemic continues to evolve, and we need to evolve our response.鈥

Rachel Cooper (right), who says she was introduced to fentanyl by her children, walks with Evelyn Jefferson, a Lummi Nation crisis outreach supervisor, at the edge of an encampment for homeless people near a Walmart store in Bellingham, Washington, Feb. 8, 2024.
Lindsey Wasson/AP/File

Much the way crack cocaine impacted predominantly Black, urban neighborhoods in the 1990s, opioid dependence and overdoses bulldozed through rural America, mainly affecting young adult and middle-aged white men.

But in the past 15 years, overdose deaths among U.S. racial minorities, including from the use of opioids, have聽, with the mortality rate among Black Americans rising by 249% between 1999 and 2022.

An issue of public concern 鈥 with boundaries聽

Although drug use has typically been considered a problem for poor, urban communities, Americans more generally have grown increasingly sympathetic toward opioid users seeking care. Three in 10 say they or a family member has experienced opioid addiction.

And it is not just an issue for Democrats. More than half of Republicans (55%) oppose major cuts to the current Medicaid program. Sen. Josh Hawley, a Republican from Missouri, has called the proposed Medicaid rules 鈥渕orally wrong and politically suicidal,鈥 saying that the cuts would alienate working-class voters.

But there is a limit to that concern.

Rep. Nicole Malliotakis of New York, an early Republican critic of the Medicaid reductions, told CNN recently that she changed her mind and was now supporting the cuts because they target 鈥減eople in the country illegally鈥 and 鈥減eople who refuse鈥 to meet work requirements.

Attitudes about who should receive help can shift depending on historical patterns and whether 鈥渇avored groups鈥 are the ones suffering, says Professor Herzberg, a historian also at the University of Buffalo.

Places like Asheville, a leafy, vibrant city that some locals see as an 鈥渙asis鈥 for drug use, are among the testing grounds.

Starting around 2010 through the COVID-19 pandemic, Asheville and the surrounding Buncombe County saw a surge in fentanyl-related overdose deaths, with about half of them being of people also experiencing homelessness. The other half came from all socioeconomic backgrounds. According to the North Carolina coroner鈥檚 office, those who died were restaurant workers, a dance instructor, a jeweler, and a Border Patrol agent.

That toll fueled a local response, which tapped into a culture of recovery in Asheville. Government institutions adopted harm reduction programs over punitive ones. The sheriff was elected in part on his plan to offer medication assisted treatment 鈥 which can cut overdose deaths by half 鈥 to incarcerated people. Underwriting many of these costs was, again, Medicaid.

Yon Goldblatt, a recovering methamphetamine addict, talks about how Medicaid, the low-income government insurance program, was part of his journey to sobriety, in Asheville, North Carolina, on May 29, 2025.
Patrik Jonsson/海角大神

Yon Goldblatt, a who is recovering from an addiction to methamphetamine and is homeless and living in Asheville, says Medicaid got him on the road to recovery.

But he understands how many Americans grow impatient with helping people who don鈥檛 seem willing 鈥 or able 鈥 to help themselves. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like saving someone from drowning and then watching them jump right back in the water,鈥 says the former massage therapist.

Professor Herzberg offers a different read. To him, an effective strategy is like pulling a drowning person to the surface and then releasing them only after they鈥檝e had the chance to take a breath.

Medicaid cuts, he says, could jeopardize ready resources for addiction-affected places like Asheville to help them develop 鈥 and provide 鈥 harm reduction programs, fentanyl test strips, and other drug deterrents.

鈥淲e have this continuum in the U.S. where harm reduction is really respected and in other places it鈥檚 not,鈥 says Professor Lynch, a former emergency medical technician. 鈥淵ou can get people on a recovery pathway. Or you can say, 鈥楾oo bad. You get nothing.鈥欌

As Ms. Hayes and her team gather in a grocery store parking lot, she hails a shirtless man and waves him over. His name is Shawn Vandernick, and he was her father鈥檚 best friend. Mr. Vandernick says that he has had an addiction to meth for a long time. But he credits Ms. Hayes鈥 PORT for helping him seek Medicaid-funded treatment.

鈥淭here鈥檚 no doubt,鈥 he says with a bright grin. 鈥淭heir efforts are paying off.鈥