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A07913 Summary:

BILL NOA07913A
 
SAME ASSAME AS S02815-A
 
SPONSORSimotas
 
COSPNSR
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Add Art 25 Title 1 2509, Pub Health L
 
Directs the commissioner of health to establish at least 4 infant recovery centers in areas of need for infants suffering from drug withdrawal as a result of in utero exposure.
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A07913 Memo:

NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY
MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION
submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)
 
BILL NUMBER: A7913A
 
SPONSOR: Simotas
  TITLE OF BILL: An act to amend the public health law, in relation to establishing the infant recovery centers pilot program; and providing for the repeal of such provisions upon expiration thereof   PURPOSE: To require the Department of Health in conjunction with the Office of Alcohol and Substance Abuse Services to establish a pilot program of infant recovery centers for infants experiencing opioid or other drug withdrawal symptoms.   SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS: Section 1. Amends section 2500 of the Public Health law to direct the Department of Health to establish a pilot program of infant recovery, centers for infants experiencing drug withdrawal symptoms. The bill also directs the Department to report to the Legislature on the program and pilots. Section 2. Provides an immediate effective date and has the program sunset in four years so that it can be evaluated and updated if neces- sary.   JUSTIFICATION: One aspect of the nation's opioid abuse is, the number of babies born with severe withdrawal symptoms. Hospitals are scrambling to find ways to care for the burgeoning population of drug addicted newborns. The result is symptoms consistent with withdrawal, acute toxicity or sustained signs consistent with a lasting drug effect. This is known as neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS). These babies require specialized care and are often treated in new born intensive care units with an estimated cost of $66,700 per infant. Hospital diversion programs for these infants can provide less costly and more focused care for newborns and their parents. Nationwide, it is estimated the number of pregnant woman using heroin, prescription opioids or addiction treatment medications either methadone or buprenorphine has increased fivefold since 2000. This act directs the Department of Health, in consultation with the Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services, to establish pilot infant recovery centers outside of the hospital where newborns can withdraw and recover from NAS and other symptoms of addiction as soon as it is safe for them to leave the hospital. At the recovery centers, infants would receive the same kind of medical treatment for their withdrawal symptoms as they would in the hospital while simultaneously being provided a better, cost effi- cient help for newborns through the painful, weeks long process of drug withdrawal. In Huntington, West Virginia, it was reported that in 2010, babies born to mothers using heroin were filling up so many beds in the newborn intensive care unit at the city's main hospital that little space was left for babies with other life-threatening conditions. As a result, by 2012, Lily's Place, an infant recovery center outside of the hospital was created where the newborns could be taken as soon as it was safe for them to leave the hospital. Lily's Place, staffed by the same doctor and team of nurses who treat drug exposed babies in those hospital, plus a social worker and adminis- trative staff, is a transitional care center where parents can visit their babies throughout the day and occasionally stay overnight before taking them home. Lily's Place has become a model for communities in the rest of the country that are experiencing the same kind of growth in drug exposed newborns as Huntington. The cost of caring for a drug exposed newborn in a hospital is nearly 20 times the cost of hospital care for a healthy infant, whereas the cost of caring for newborns at Lily's Place is one-fifth the daily rate of a hospital intensive care unit.   LEGISLATIVE HISTORY: New bill.   FISCAL IMPLICATIONS: Savings to state as addicted infants receive needed care in less costly setting than hospitals, and mothers receive support that can help foster healthy babies and families.   EFFECTIVE DATE: This act shall take effect immediately, and shall expire and be deemed repealed 4 years after such date.
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