Do You Know What Mental Health Parity Is?

Here is how The New York Times editorial page describes it:

What the new rule would mean in practice is that limits on the amount of co-payments and the number of doctor visits or hospital days cannot be less generous than those that apply to most medical and surgical benefits. The same would be true of other rules, like those requiring prior authorization.

Here’s how Timothy Jost says it really works:

05645A financial requirement or quantitative treatment limitation is considered to apply to “substantially all” medical/surgical benefits if it applies to at least two-thirds of the medical/surgical benefits in a classification. A type of financial requirement or quantitative treatment limitation is considered “predominant” if it applies to more than one half of the medical/surgical benefits in a classification that are subject to the requirement or limitation. For example, if two thirds of the medical surgical benefits in a classification were subject to a coinsurance obligation, and more than half were subject to a coinsurance obligation of 30 percent, mental health benefits could be subject to a coinsurance obligation, but it could not exceed 30 percent.

Where different financial requirements or treatment limitations apply within a classification, plans may combine levels until the combination of levels applies to more than one half of the medical/surgical benefits subject to the requirement or limitation, and apply this requirement or limitation to mental health benefits. The portion of medical/surgical benefits subject to a financial requirement or quantitative treatment limitation is based on dollar amounts for plan payments for the benefits expected to be paid under the plan, before enrollee cost-sharing requirements are applied. So, for example, if 20 percent of payments for medical/surgical services were for services in a classification with a 10 percent coinsurance level, 40 percent for services with a 15 percent coinsurance level, and 40 percent for services with a 20 percent coinsurance level, the plan or issuer could apply a 15 percent coinsurance level to mental health and substance abuse disorder services. If plans offer coverage through separate insurers for mental health or substance use disorders on the one hand and medical/surgical services on the other, parity calculations must apply to combined coverage as a whole.

Comments (13)

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  1. JD says:

    “What the new rule would mean in practice is that limits on the amount of co-payments and the number of doctor visits or hospital days cannot be less generous than those that apply to most medical and surgical benefits.”

    Great, more arbitrary limits.

  2. Dewaine says:

    Mental health science has a long way to go. Often times diagnosis doesn’t use much more than the patient’s word. With the advent of these new benefits expect undocumented fraud to skyrocket.

    • Sabal says:

      So you think that people will utilize mental health service even if nothing is wrong?

      • Dewaine says:

        No not necessarily, but people will definitely over-utilize service, especially since so little is known about mental health. As for completely faking it, I guess it depends on what kind of drugs can be procured.

        • Mark says:

          Based on how easy it is to get drugs for physical ailments new, I’m sure the amount of people utilizing this just to get a fix will be enormous.

      • Wilbur says:

        I think so. There are a lot more hypochondriacs in the world now that they have more access to health information.

        • JD says:

          And for good reason, everyone is concerned about their health. That’s why we need consumer driven health care. People need to understand the tradeoff between health services and all other goods.

    • Tom G. says:

      Agreed. We still have a long way to go in understanding mental health.