Universityโฃ Health Allocates $30 Million from Opioid Settlements to Combatโ NAS
San Antonio, TX – University Health is directingโค over $30 million received from opioid settlementsโฃ toward expanding care for mothers and babies impacted โby Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome โ(NAS), โคa condition resulting from opioid โexposure before birth. The funding will โขbolster specialized โคmedical teams and resources dedicated to โtreating infants experiencing โคwithdrawal symptoms and โคsupporting their โfamilies.
The surge in NAS cases, linked toโ the โnational opioid โคcrisis,โ places a significant strain on local healthcare systems. Infants born with NAS often require prolonged hospital stays โคand intensive medical intervention to manage symptoms like fever, respiratory distress, and โfeeding difficulties.โค Mothers also โขface increased risksโ of complications following childbirth. This new funding aims to address these โฃchallenges head-on, improving outcomes for both mothers and newborns in Bexar County,โ which has consistently recorded the highest NAS rate inโ Texas.
From 2017 to โ2021, Bexar County’s NAS rate โstoodโ at 7.7 cases perโข 1,000 hospital births,โฃ representingโ 23% of all NAS casesโ statewide, according to dataโข from the Texas Department of Stateโฃ health Services. The โinflux of settlement funds โคprovidesโข a critical possibility to offset the significant costs โฃassociated with treating these complex cases.
“This is just additional โfunding that we now โคhave in order to offset the costs associated with that, as sometimesโ they endโ up beingโฃ born with multiple conditions,”โ said Rivela. “And it โtakes a multi-faceted medical โคcare training team, โค24/7, to properly care for this baby.”
The โคinvestment will support a comprehensive,around-the-clock care modelโฃ for โinfants โwith NAS,ensuringโ access to specialized medical โฃexpertise and resources. This includes training forโข medical staff to effectively manage withdrawal symptoms andโค provide optimal care for affected newborns.