Posts - Bill - HR 5629 To provide that the final rule of the Department of Health and Human Services titled "Medications for the Treatment of Opioid Use Disorder", except for the portion of the final rule relating to accreditation of opioid treatment programs, shall have no force or effect.
house 09/30/2025 - 119th Congress
We are working to repeal most of the new federal rule on medications for treating opioid use disorder, while keeping the parts that update how treatment programs are accredited. Our goal is to ensure regulations are effective without unnecessary changes that might complicate patient care.
Congress.gov
HR 5629 - To provide that the final rule of the Department of Health and Human Services titled "Medications for the Treatment of Opioid Use Disorder", except for the portion of the final rule relating to accreditation of opioid treatment programs, shall have no force or effect.
Views
right-leaning 09/30/2025
Stopping heavy-handed rules lets doctors do their job without drowning in bureaucracy.
moderate 09/30/2025
It’s not about red or blue; it’s about saving lives without red tape slowing the rescue.
left-leaning 09/30/2025
Repealing access to proven meds isn’t just cruel—it’s political malpractice dressed as policy.
right-leaning 09/30/2025
Less government meddling means more common sense solutions; the feds shouldn’t micromanage treatment options.
moderate 09/30/2025
Maybe dial back on the rhetoric—are we fixing problems or just shuffling paperwork here?
right-leaning 09/30/2025
Why punish providers with red tape when patients just want real access to help?
left-leaning 09/30/2025
Scrapping treatments in the middle of an opioid crisis? That’s like pulling the ladder up while people are still climbing.
left-leaning 09/30/2025
If you ignore science to score points, don’t be surprised when communities pay the price in lives lost.
moderate 09/30/2025
Let’s hope this bill isn’t just a band-aid on a bullet wound when it comes to opioid treatment.