Managed mental health coverage
affordable: study
Thu Mar 30, 2006 10:09 AM ET
By Gene Emery
BOSTON (Reuters) - Health insurance plans that offer
mental health and substance abuse coverage may not be any more expensive than
less comprehensive plans, a study shows.
The study, published in this week's New England Journal of
Medicine, reviewed federal health care plans and found only one of the seven
plans examined -- the one that did not use managed care to try to control how
often subscribers used the benefits - turned out to be more expensive than
conventional plans.
Howard Goldman, a professor of psychiatry at the
University of Maryland and the study's main author, said the findings suggest
it is possible to offer mental illness and substance abuse as part of a package
covering physical illnesses "without any adverse impact on cost and
quality."
Insurance coverage of mental health services has been
controversial. While psychological problems are a major cause of disability,
getting insurers to pay for them is difficult because the problems can be
difficult and expensive to treat.
In an editorial in the Journal, Columbia University
scholars Sherry Glied and Alison Cuellar wrote: "Insurance for mental
health care should enter the mainstream of coverage."
Unlike the federal plans studied, most private insurance
and Medicare continue to have limits on mental health care.
The Goldman team found that health care costs increased
when people were offered mental health coverage, but usually no more than for
the people offered regular medical coverage.
In addition, subscribers to six of the seven plans had to
pay less in out-of-pocket expenses.
A system where mental health and substance abuse care gets
the same coverage as physical illness "is for everyone," Goldman
said. "Implementing it with managed care means that this social good can
be accomplished without adverse impact on access, cost or quality."
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