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openclaw skills install addiction-treatment-marketing-kitGenerates compliant marketing content for licensed addiction treatment centers that meets LegitScript, 42 CFR Part 2, FTC, and platform advertising regulations.
openclaw skills install addiction-treatment-marketing-kitSkill ID: #236 Bundle: healthcare-bundle Version: 1.0 Compliance Architecture: LegitScript platform certification gate + 42 CFR Part 2 SUD confidentiality gate + FTC patient brokering/outcome claims gate + Nevada NRS 449 DPBH licensing gate + SAMHSA/NAATP ethical standards gate + Google/Meta platform policy gate + Medicaid/HIPAA dual-coverage gate
Generates compliance-safe marketing content for licensed addiction treatment centers, behavioral health facilities, detox programs, residential treatment programs, outpatient (PHP/IOP/OP) programs, and sober living homes that avoids the 7 regulatory and platform violations present in virtually all addiction treatment marketing currently running in Nevada and nationwide. Addiction treatment is the most heavily regulated and most FTC-enforcement-targeted category of healthcare advertising. Every general AI marketing tool generates recovery outcome statistics, patient testimonials, and Google/Meta ad copy for treatment centers — all of which violate FTC rules, 42 CFR Part 2, and platform certification requirements that no general AI training data contains.
Four prompts:
Worked example: Sunrise Recovery Center Henderson — Jonathan Rivera MS CADC-II (NV CADC #002847) + Dr. Priya Shah MD FASAM (Nevada Medical Board #28913, ABAM/ABPM-AM board certified) — 14/14 compliance audit PASS
Regulations: Google Ads Policy (Addiction Treatment Healthcare Policy, effective 2018), Meta Advertising Policies (Addiction Treatment Certification Requirement), LegitScript Addiction Treatment Certification Program, FTC Act Section 5
What it blocks:
Why it matters: Google suspended ALL addiction treatment advertising in September 2017 citing widespread fraud, patient brokering, and consumer harm. After 14 months, Google reinstated the category in October 2018 — but only for LegitScript-certified providers. Meta/Facebook followed with an identical requirement. LegitScript certification costs $995–$1,500 annually and requires: state facility license documentation, proof of accreditation (CARF/JCAHO or equivalent), licensed clinical staff documentation, no patient brokering arrangements, compliance with NAATP Code of Ethics, and a site inspection for residential programs. Every AI marketing tool generates Google and Meta ad copy for treatment centers without asking whether the client is LegitScript-certified — because LegitScript certification is a platform enforcement mechanism that postdates all general AI training data. Every uncertified treatment center that runs this AI-generated ad copy has their account suspended within days of launch.
Required input: LegitScript certification status (active/pending/not-certified) + LegitScript account number if active + state facility license number + CARF or Joint Commission accreditation (yes/no, accreditation number) + services covered by certification
Regulations: 42 CFR Part 2 (Confidentiality of Substance Use Disorder Patient Records), 42 U.S.C. § 290dd-2, SAMHSA Final Rule 2020 (42 CFR Part 2 revisions), HIPAA/HITECH (45 CFR Parts 160 and 164)
What it blocks:
Why it matters: 42 CFR Part 2 was enacted specifically for SUD treatment because Congress recognized that the stigma of addiction creates unique risks if records are disclosed. Part 2 is MORE restrictive than HIPAA in key ways: (1) re-disclosure prohibition — even an authorized recipient of Part 2 records cannot re-disclose without additional consent; (2) law enforcement exception is narrower — Part 2 records cannot be disclosed to law enforcement without a court order except in narrow circumstances; (3) the 2020 Final Rule aligned Part 2 somewhat more closely with HIPAA but did not eliminate the fundamental disclosure restrictions. The SAMHSA FAQ explicitly states that marketing use of patient names, photographs, testimonials, or treatment status requires separate written consent beyond treatment authorization. Violations can result in criminal penalties (up to $500 fine/$5,000 fine for repeat violations) and OCR/SAMHSA complaint investigations. This skill generates zero content that implies SUD patient record sharing, inter-provider communication, or alumni identification without explicit consent documentation.
Required input: Whether alumni testimonials are desired (yes/no, consent documentation status) + referral coordination practices (what information is shared with whom) + EAP relationships if any + Part 2 consent program status (implemented/in progress/not implemented)
Regulations: FTC Act Section 5 (15 U.S.C. § 45), FTC Enforcement Policy Statement on Deceptive and Unsubstantiated Health Claims, SAMHSA Advisory (TIP 58 — Behavioral Health Services for People Who Are Homeless), NAATP Code of Ethics (2018 revised), Nevada NRS 439B.470 (healthcare fraud), Anti-Kickback Statute (42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7b)
What it blocks:
Why it matters: Addiction treatment is the #1 FTC healthcare advertising enforcement category by volume. The 2019 FTC action against patient brokers in South Florida and Southern California resulted in hundreds of enforcement actions, asset freezes, and criminal referrals. The core fraud pattern: facilities paying "patient brokers" or "body brokers" cash or in-kind consideration for each admission, then billing private insurance for extended medically unnecessary stays. This pattern was so widespread that Google's 2017 ad suspension was driven by it. Recovery outcome statistics are the most commonly false claim in addiction treatment marketing — SAMHSA research consistently shows industry-reported "success rates" have no standardized definition and typically count only patients who complete the program and self-report sobriety at 30 days, while the actual long-term recovery rate for the full treatment-seeking population is significantly lower. This skill generates zero outcome statistics, zero referral incentive language, and zero "guarantee" language.
Required input: Referral network structure (how referrals are received and what if anything is given to referral sources) + current marketing claims about outcomes/success rates + accreditation documentation + whether any third-party lead generation services are used
Regulations: Nevada Revised Statutes Chapter 449 (Health Facilities), NRS 449.0305 (Residential Treatment Programs), NRS 449.035 (DPBH Facility License), NRS 449.990 (Penalties), Nevada Division of Public and Behavioral Health (DPBH at dpbh.nv.gov), Nevada Behavioral Health Licensing & Certification Program, NRS 449B (Continuing Care Retirement), NAC 449
What it blocks:
Why it matters: Nevada DPBH regulates addiction treatment facilities under a tiered licensing structure. The specific license level determines what services may legally be provided and advertised. Medical detox requires physician oversight that outpatient-only licenses do not provide. Methadone OTP programs require separate federal certification from SAMHSA's Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT) that only approximately 1,900 programs nationwide hold — advertising methadone treatment without OTP certification is a federal violation. The DEA Buprenorphine Waiver program was converted to standard DEA registration by the MATE Act in 2023 — any marketing claiming prescribers have "waivered buprenorphine" should be updated to reflect that waiver language is no longer technically accurate post-MATE Act. Nevada CADC credentialing is issued through NRS 641C — claiming "licensed counselors" when staff only hold CADC without clinical licensure misrepresents the level of credential.
Required input: DPBH facility license number + license type and service levels covered + SAMHSA OTP certification number (if methadone program) + DEA registration for buprenorphine prescribers + CADC/LADC credential numbers for clinical staff + CARF or Joint Commission accreditation numbers and service lines covered + Nevada Medicaid provider enrollment status
Regulations: SAMHSA Treatment Improvement Protocols (TIPs), NAATP Code of Ethics (2018), SAMHSA's National Registry of Evidence-based Programs and Practices (NREPP/now EBCST), ASAM Patient Placement Criteria (ASAM PPC), NAATP Advertising Standards, National Alliance for Recovery Residences (NARR) Standards (for sober living)
What it blocks:
Why it matters: SAMHSA publishes Treatment Improvement Protocols (TIPs) that establish clinical standards. ASAM's Patient Placement Criteria are the national standard for determining appropriate level of care — using marketing language that recommends specific levels of care (residential, IOP, detox) for patients the facility has not yet assessed is a NAATP Code of Ethics violation and creates potential liability if the marketed level of care is clinically inappropriate. NAATP membership requires attestation to the Code of Ethics — any NAATP-member facility using patient brokering, misleading outcome claims, or exploitative advertising violates its membership terms. The "luxury rehab" category has drawn specific FTC scrutiny: amenity-focused marketing (equine therapy, ocean views, gourmet meals) that displaces clinical programming from the advertising message can constitute deceptive advertising when clinical outcomes are materially worse than implied.
Required input: Clinical staff credentials and ASAM training status + level-of-care assessment process + amenities vs. clinical programming balance + insurance network status (list of in-network payers) + whether sober living referral relationships exist + teen/adolescent programming (yes/no)
Regulations: Google Ads Healthcare and Medicines Policy (Addiction Treatment), Meta Advertising Policies (Health and Wellness — Addiction Treatment Services), Google LegitScript Certification Verification Portal, Meta Health Certification Process
What it blocks:
Why it matters: The Google addiction treatment policy applies to any keyword, URL, or ad content that Google classifies as related to addiction treatment — regardless of how the advertiser describes their services. A "wellness center" that treats addiction but avoids the word "rehab" in its ads will still be reviewed under the addiction treatment policy if the landing page contains addiction-related content. Meta applies the same principle at the account level. LegitScript certification verification is done by both platforms at account approval and periodically revalidated — a lapsed LegitScript certification causes running campaigns to be paused automatically. The practical consequence: every AI-generated Google or Meta ad for a treatment center that has not been LegitScript-certified is ad spend that produces a suspended account, not a call.
Required input: Google Ads account status (active/suspended/not yet created) + Meta advertising account status + LegitScript certification active (yes/no, expiration date) + keywords currently used in campaigns + current ad account health status
Regulations: Anti-Kickback Statute (42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7b), False Claims Act (31 U.S.C. § 3729), Nevada Medicaid Program Integrity (NRS 422.540), HIPAA Marketing Authorization (45 CFR § 164.508), 42 CFR Part 2 + HIPAA interaction, Nevada DHCFP Behavioral Health Billing Manual
What it blocks:
Why it matters: Addiction treatment billing fraud is the most active DOJ/OIG False Claims Act enforcement area in healthcare after COVID-19 relief fraud. The "insurance arbitrage" model — admit insured patients, maximize billing, ignore clinical necessity — created the patient brokering crisis. AKS safe harbors are narrow in addiction treatment: the personal services and management contracts safe harbor (42 CFR 1001.952(d)), the employees safe harbor (42 CFR 1001.952(i)), and the waiver of beneficiary cost-sharing safe harbor (42 CFR 1001.952(k)) all have specific requirements that most treatment center marketing violates. Medicaid program integrity audits specifically flag addiction treatment providers for: billing for services not rendered, billing for higher levels of care than delivered, and waiving cost-sharing without documentation. The Nevada Medicaid Fraud Control Unit (MFCU) at the Nevada Attorney General's office investigates and prosecutes these cases at the state level.
Required input: Insurance payer mix (private pay %, Medicaid %, commercial insurance %) + in-network vs. out-of-network status by payer + financial assistance/scholarship policy + cost-sharing waiver policy and documentation + whether any payer pre-authorization processes are included in admission workflow
Before running any prompt, collect:
prompts/01-patient-acquisition-campaigns.md — outreach, referral letters, crisis integrationprompts/02-digital-advertising-suite.md — LegitScript-gated Google/Meta ads, SEO contentprompts/03-website-content-schema.md — service pages, FAQ, JSON-LD schemaprompts/04-reputation-community-outreach.md — alumni engagement, GBP responses, professional referral lettersEvery output includes a compliance checklist confirming:
| Regulation | Authority | Key Requirement | Penalty |
|---|---|---|---|
| LegitScript Certification | Google / Meta | Required before paid ads run | Account suspension |
| 42 CFR Part 2 | SAMHSA / HHS OCR | SUD records more protected than HIPAA | Criminal: up to $5,000/violation |
| FTC Act Section 5 | FTC | No false outcome claims or patient brokering | Civil penalties, asset freezure |
| Anti-Kickback Statute | DOJ / OIG | No remuneration for referrals | 10 years/$100K/count + exclusion |
| NRS 449 / DPBH | Nevada DPBH | Facility license required per service line | Class B misdemeanor (unlicensed) |
| NRS 641C | Nevada Board of Examiners | CADC/LADC credentials for counselors | License revocation |
| HIPAA 164.508 | HHS OCR | Marketing authorization for patient content | Up to $1.9M/violation category/year |
| False Claims Act | DOJ / HHS OIG | Accurate billing for services rendered | 3× damages + $13,946-$27,894/claim |