Middlesex Sheriff, Sen. Markey Announce Effort to Increase Opioid Treatment in Jails

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Middlesex Sheriff's Office

Sheriff Peter Koutoujian and Sen. Ed Markey spoke about a joint effort to expand opioid treatment in jails.

Sheriff Peter Koutoujian and Sen. Ed Markey spoke about a joint effort to expand opioid treatment in jails.

The following information was provided by the Middlesex Sheriff’s Office:

Senator Edward J. Markey (D – MA) joined Middlesex Sheriff Peter J. Koutoujian Wednesday for a private roundtable discussion with staff and inmates at the Middlesex Jail & House of Correction about efforts to expand opioid treatment in jails.

Senator Markey visited Billerica to discuss the Middlesex Sheriff’s Office nationally recognized Medication Assisted Treatment And Directed Opioid Recovery (MATADOR) program and talk about his recently filed Community Re-Entry through Addiction Treatment to Enhance (CREATE) Opportunities Act.  The bipartisan CREATE Opportunities Act, which has been endorsed by both the Major County Sheriffs of America and the National Sheriffs’ Association, would authorize the creation of a federally funded grant program allowing local jurisdictions to provide access to medication-assisted treatment (MAT) in correctional facilities.

“We were honored to have Senator Markey visit and meet with those directly impacted by this crisis and who will most benefit from the critical, bipartisan legislation he has filed,” said Sheriff Koutoujian.  “The Senator has been a true leader and partner in efforts to identify and support initiatives like our MATADOR program to tackle the opioid crisis.  Passage of this legislation would benefit jurisdictions large and small across the country and greatly enhance our capabilities as we prepare for the expanded MAT pilot here in the Commonwealth.”

Since the launch of MATADOR in the fall of 2015, 82 percent of participants who successfully completed six months in the program have not recidivated and 96 percent of all participants – regardless of whether they had completed the program – had not succumbed to a fatal post-release overdose.

“Our county jails are an indispensable partner in ending the opioid overdose crisis once and for all,” said Senator Markey. “Evidence shows that providing medication assisted treatment during incarceration can reduce the likelihood of an opioid overdose fatality. We need to provide programs like MATADOR in Middlesex County the funding they need to expand this lifesaving treatment. We know we cannot incarcerate our way out of this crisis. Instead, we must rehabilitate in order to reduce recidivism and save lives. I applaud Sheriff Koutoujian for his commitment to compassion and rehabilitation.”

Roundtable participants who met with Senator Markey discussed some of the components that have led to MATADOR’s success, including enrollment in health insurance – especially Medicaid – and the importance of navigators who assist those leaving incarceration through the crucial early days and months of the reentry process. Senator Markey recently reintroduced the Supporting Positive Outcomes After Release Act, legislation that would prohibit states from terminating an inmate’s Medicaid coverage while they are incarcerated.

In addition to the roundtable, Senator Markey also toured the medical unit and met with inmates and detainees in the facility’s Housing Unit for Military Veterans (HUMV).

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