Private
55.6%
($1.4 T)
Public
44.4%
($1.1 T)
Medical Care
Private
20.8%
($5.8 B)
Public
79.2%
($22.2 B)
Addiction Treatment
Source: CASA Columbia (2012) analysis of the National Expenditures for Mental Health Services &
Substance Abuse Treatment 1986-2005 (Table A.1) SAMHSA Spending Estimates Project, 2010; CMS Office
of the Actuary, National Health Statistics Group with our estimated dollar updates.
Figure 7.C
Public vs Private Spending
Private Health
Insurance
30.5% ($1.8B)Self-Pay 56.6% ($3.3B)
Other Private
Sources
12.9% ($0.8B)
Figure 7.D
Components of Private Addiction
Treatment Spending (Total $5.8B)
Source: CASA Columbia analysis of the National Expenditures for Mental
Health Services & Substance Abuse Treatment 1986-2005. (2012).
Privately-Funded Treatment ......................................................................................
In 2010, 20.8 percent ($5.8 billion) of addiction
treatment expenditures came from private
sources. Private spending includes:
56.6 percent ($3.3 billion) from private
health insurance;
30.5 percent ($1.8 billion) from self-pay by
patients; and
(^)
12.9 percent ($0.8 billion) from other private
sources, such as charitable donations and
charity care/fee waivers.^53 (Figure 7.D)
Publicly-Funded Treatment
In 2010 79.2 percent ($22.2 billion) in addiction
treatment expenditures came from public
sources. Public spending includes:
45.3 percent ($10.1 billion) from state and
local government non-Medicaid sources;
26.3 percent ($5.9 billion) from Medicaid;
19.9 percent ($4.4 billion) from other
federal funds such as block grants to states;
and
8.5 percent ($1.9 billion) from Medicare.* 54
(Figure 7.E)
* Medicaid and Medicare are government programs
with state and federal contributions. Therefore, the
estimates reported in the federal, state and local
categories are exclusive of the estimates of public
funds spent through Medicare and Medicaid
programs.