Given that many studies have reported that the costs of substance use disorder (SUD) treatment are more than offset by other savings (e.g., in health care, in criminal justice, in foster care), why haven't health care system managers rushed to expand treatment?
This article attempts to explain this puzzling discrepancy by analyzing 1998–2006 data from the national Veterans Affairs (VA) health care system.
The main outcome measures were annual cost and utilization for VA SUD-diagnosed patients. The key independent variable was the medical centers' annual spending for SUD treatment.
There was no evidence that SUD spending was associated with lower medical center costs over time within the medical center that paid for the treatment.
Health care system managers may not be influenced by research suggesting that the costs of SUD treatment are more than fully offset because they bear the cost of providing treatment while the savings largely accrue to other systems.
Request Reprint E-Mail: knh@stanford.edu