
Psychiatr News January 18, 2008
Volume 43, Number 2, page 1
© 2008 American Psychiatric Association
Parity Legislation Stalls as Negotiations Continue
Rich Daly
Differences over the types of illnesses to be included and the varying
ways that out-of-network benefits would be administered halt progress on
mental health parity legislation.
By the end of 2007, Congress had made the most progress to date on
passing legislation mandating that health plans cover mental health and
substance abuse treatment to the same extent that they cover other medical and
surgical treatment. Ultimately, however, the legislation fell short.
Following Senate and House approval of different versions of mental health
parity legislation (S 558, HR 1424), negotiators were unable to overcome their
differences.
Despite the remaining obstacles, parity supporters are still optimistic
that a compromise will be reached this year.
"A compromise is very doable," said Nicholas Meyers, director
of APA's Department of Government Relations, about the bills, both of which
APA has endorsed. "But it will require some give on both
parts."
The differences between the House and Senate negotiators have come down to
three main areas: which types of mental illness should be covered, what
out-of-network benefits will be offered, and what approach will allow the best
preservation of stronger state laws.
Nonetheless, both bills require that insurance plans that include mental
health benefits must cover those benefits at parity with in-network or
out-of-network medical/surgical benefits. Thus, passage of either the Senate
or House version, Meyers said, would constitute a major improvement over the
current 1996 Mental Health Parity Act, which only guarantees equality in
annual and lifetime payment limits.
One of the main differences over which negotiators remained deadlocked was
that the House bill would require any plan that provides mental health parity
coverage to recognize all illnesses in the Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). The Senate measure would leave it up to
health plans to determine the psychiatric conditions they would cover.
"Unlike the House version, the Senate bill does not require health
plans offering mental health benefits to cover the same mental health and
substance-related disorders that are included in the health plans available to
members of Congress," said Rep. Patrick Kennedy (D-R.I.), in a written
statement when the House passed its version.
Business and insurance-industry lob-byists have opposed a
DSM-based diagnosis standard, arguing that it might require treatment
of any condition listed in the manual. Supporters of the House bill counter
that while it does compel treatment of DSM-IV conditions, it leaves
it up to the plans to decide the extent of treatment they will cover.
Negotiators also were unable to find common ground on differences in
out-of-network benefits. The House bill would require any plans that include
an out-of-network benefit to also offer out-of-network parity mental health
coverage. The Senate version would allow plans to offer a medical/surgical
out-of-network benefit without offering a corresponding mental health benefit.
If the plans did offer an out-of-network mental health benefit, they would
have to do so at parity.
Critics of the Senate version said it might have unforeseen effects.
"Parity proposals that do not require any coverage for out-of-network
[mental health] benefits may paradoxically have the unintended adverse
consequence of decreasing access to mental health treatment," wrote the
authors of a parity study, including Darrel Regier, M.D., M.P.H., executive
director of the American Psychiatric Institute for Research and Education,
which was published in December 2007 on the Health Affairs Web site
(Psychiatric News, January 4).
That study of insurance coverage in the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area
found that as few as 38 percent of clinicians participated in any insurance
network, so the services of the 62 percent who don't participate would not be
covered for insurance-plan participants with policies that barred
out-of-network mental health care. The study also high-lighted estimates that
if parity for out-of-network benefits is required, 20 percent of professional
services nationally would be provided out of network.
"Our study shows that even in an area relatively rich in mental
health resources such as Washington, D.C., and its surroundings, plan networks
are not equipped to meet the full need for mental health treatment,"
Regier said in a written statement. "Maintaining the out-of-network
option is essential to ensuring access to treatment."
Although differences also remain in the ways the bills address state laws
that provide stronger parity benefits, Senate negotiators have "moved
fundamentally toward the House bill," Meyers. Both bills would now allow
those stronger state parity measures to stand.
The House bill has additional measures that require greater insurance plan
transparency and reviews of the utilization of mental health benefits, which
are not included in the Senate measure. These provisions have drawn less
opposition from Senate negotiators and will be more easily resolved, Meyers
said.
"I continue to believe that there is room for compromise here. I
really hope they get this done, and certainly we will continue to support
efforts to secure a compromise," Meyers said.
The Health Affairs study, "Parity and the Use of
Out-of-Network Mental Health Benefits in the FEHB Program," is posted at
<http://content.healthaffairs.org/cgi/content/full/hlthaff.27.1.w70/>.
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