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Schedule A <br />Statement of Work <br />'t. Purpose. <br />To provide medication for opioid use disorder (MOOD) in jails to incarcerated individuals who <br />present with an opioid use disorder (OUD). To support a full MOUD program which includes <br />the following: an OUD assessment, discussion of MOUD options between the incarcerated <br />individual and provider, initiation prior to the onset of withdrawal or continuation of MOOD, <br />release and reentry planning to include connection with continued treatment, same day <br />release appointment when possible or MOUD to bridge patient until next appointment and <br />naloxone upon release. Reentry planning may also include assisting the incarcerated <br />individual with sign-up of Medicaid, reestablishing Medicaid and connection with the Managed <br />Care Organizations (MCOs). <br />Health Equity - This project also intends to address inequities in OUD treatment and recovery <br />services by providing medically necessary treatment for opioid use disorder to incarcerated <br />individuals. MOUD in jails programs should understand cultural barriers and provide culturally <br />appropriate services and recognize the need for inclusion of people with lived experiences in <br />the development of the MOUD in jails programs. Additionally, this project intends to identify <br />stigma and educate staff to ensure ongoing collaboration and openness to change. <br />2. Performance Work Statement. <br />The Contractor shall ensure funds are responsibly used towards the MOUD program in the <br />jail/jails and provide the core components or a progressive plan to achieve the core <br />components which include: <br />a. FDA approved medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD) must be available and <br />offered to all incarcerated individuals who present with OUD at intake. Individuals with <br />OUD may decline MOUD at any time, but ongoing discussions on MOUD may be <br />offered. <br />b. Methadone, buprenorphine, naltrexone should all be offered unless: (a) an opioid <br />treatment program (OTP) is not within reasonable driving distance from the jail, in <br />which case the jail is not required to offer methadone as an option; or (b) there is no <br />available buprenorphine provider in the community to which the patient will likely <br />release, in which case the jail is not required to offer buprenorphine as an option. <br />Naltrexone may be provided in oral formulation while the patient is incarcerated, but <br />injectable long-acting naltrexone must be offered as an option prior to release. <br />c. MOUD must be continued for those who are already taking MOUD upon entering the <br />facility. MOUD is continued using the same medication, at the same dose unless <br />ordered otherwise by the prescriber based on clinical need (documented in the <br />patient's medical record) with the exception of injectable long-acting naltrexone which <br />may be converted to an equivalent oral dose until just prior to release and the <br />injectable form is restarted. Methadone may be transitioned to buprenorphine if the jail <br />is not a licensed opioid treatment program (OTP) and the nearest OTP is not within <br />reasonable driving distance from the jail. The presence of other illicit or controlled <br />Washington State 33 Description of Services <br />Health Care Authority HCA Contract #K5885 <br />