The public sector and mental health parity: time for inclusion

IF 1 4区 医学 Q4 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES
Michael F. Hogan
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Continuity of treatment between systems may be impaired, and costs may be higher due to duplicate administrative costs. Maintaining a separate system managed by government may exacerbate the stigma associated with mental illness treatment. Most significantly, since eligibility for care may be linked to poverty status, and since having a serious mental illness may preclude regaining private coverage, maintaining a separate system may contribute to the poverty rate among persons with mental illnesses. AIMS OF THE PAPER: These potential problems have not been widely considered, perhaps because other problems and controversies in mental health care have captured our attention. In particular, controversies over deinstitutionalization in mental health have dominated the policy debate, especially when linked to related problems. These have included conflicts over authority and financial responsibility among federal, state and local governments, sensationalized media coverage of incidents involving people with mental illness, problems with siting community facilities, concern about mental illness among prisoners and the like. However, with the substantial reform of public mental health care in some states and localities, it is now possible to consider the implications of public and private integration. This paper considers such an approach. METHODS: This paper addresses the question of public and private integration, considering the state of Ohio as a case study. Ohio is a large state (population 11.2 million) and shares demographic, cultural and political characteristics with many other states. Ohio's successful experience implementing community mental health reform makes it a good candidate to use in evaluating issues in the potential integration of insurance-paid and public mental health care. 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引用次数: 4

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In the United States, there is an uneasy division of responsibility for financing mental health care. For most illnesses, employer-sponsored health insurance and the large federal health insurance programs (Medicare, Medicaid) cover the costs of care. However, most employer-sponsored plans and Medicare provide only limited coverage for treatment of mental illness. A possible cause and result of this limited coverage in mental health is that states, and in some cases local (county) governments, finance a separate system of mental health care. This separate "public mental health system" provides a "safety net" of care for indigent individuals needing mental health care. However, there are potential negative consequences of maintaining separate systems. Continuity of treatment between systems may be impaired, and costs may be higher due to duplicate administrative costs. Maintaining a separate system managed by government may exacerbate the stigma associated with mental illness treatment. Most significantly, since eligibility for care may be linked to poverty status, and since having a serious mental illness may preclude regaining private coverage, maintaining a separate system may contribute to the poverty rate among persons with mental illnesses. AIMS OF THE PAPER: These potential problems have not been widely considered, perhaps because other problems and controversies in mental health care have captured our attention. In particular, controversies over deinstitutionalization in mental health have dominated the policy debate, especially when linked to related problems. These have included conflicts over authority and financial responsibility among federal, state and local governments, sensationalized media coverage of incidents involving people with mental illness, problems with siting community facilities, concern about mental illness among prisoners and the like. However, with the substantial reform of public mental health care in some states and localities, it is now possible to consider the implications of public and private integration. This paper considers such an approach. METHODS: This paper addresses the question of public and private integration, considering the state of Ohio as a case study. Ohio is a large state (population 11.2 million) and shares demographic, cultural and political characteristics with many other states. Ohio's successful experience implementing community mental health reform makes it a good candidate to use in evaluating issues in the potential integration of insurance-paid and public mental health care. RESULTS: The analysis indicates that the resources now used in Ohio's public system may be sufficient to support insurance financing of inpatient and ambulatory mental health treatment (the types of health care usually paid by insurance) while maintaining supportive services (e.g. housing, crisis care) as a residual safety net. DISCUSSION: At the current time, these resources are in state and local mental health budgets, and in the Medicaid program that finances health care for low income and disabled individuals. The analysis indicates that the aggregate level of resources expended on inpatient and ambulatory mental health treatment are substantially greater than expenditures for such care in an insurance plan for Ohio State employees. A substantial limitation of the analysis is that it is not possible to compare the need for care in a relatively healthy employed population versus a poor and disabled population. CONCLUSION: The paper concludes that there are substantial structural, economic and social problems associated with the "two-tiered" system of commercial/employer-paid insurance and public mental health care in the United States. Examining data from one state's public system, the paper further concludes that it might be feasible to finance a single system of acute and ambulatory mental health benefits, if public resources were redeployed and private contributions were continued. IMPLICATIONS FOR POLICY AND RESEARCH: Given the substantial problems associated with the two-tiered American approach to mental health care, further consideration and analyses of the feasibility of public and private integration are suggested. Given the complexity of this effort, much more sophisticated analysis is needed. However, given the possibility that sufficient resources may now be available to accomplish integration, further work is suggested.
公共部门与心理健康平等:包容的时机
背景:在美国,资助精神卫生保健的责任划分令人不安。对于大多数疾病,雇主赞助的医疗保险和大型联邦医疗保险计划(医疗保险、医疗补助)支付医疗费用。然而,大多数雇主赞助的计划和医疗保险只为精神疾病的治疗提供有限的覆盖范围。心理健康覆盖范围有限的一个可能原因和结果是,各州,在某些情况下,地方(县)政府,资助了一个单独的心理健康护理系统。这个单独的“公共心理健康系统”为需要心理健康护理的贫困个人提供了一个“安全网”。然而,维持单独的系统也有潜在的负面后果。系统之间治疗的连续性可能会受到损害,并且由于重复的管理成本,成本可能会更高。维持一个由政府管理的独立系统可能会加剧与精神疾病治疗相关的耻辱感。最重要的是,由于获得护理的资格可能与贫困状况有关,而且患有严重的精神疾病可能会阻碍重新获得私人保险,因此维持一个单独的系统可能会导致精神疾病患者的贫困率。论文的目的:这些潜在的问题没有得到广泛的考虑,也许是因为心理健康护理中的其他问题和争议引起了我们的注意。特别是,关于心理健康非机构化的争议主导了政策辩论,尤其是当涉及相关问题时。其中包括联邦、州和地方政府之间的权力和财政责任冲突,媒体对涉及精神疾病患者的事件的耸人听闻的报道,社区设施选址问题,囚犯对精神疾病的担忧等等。然而,随着一些州和地方对公共精神卫生保健进行实质性改革,现在可以考虑公共和私人融合的影响。本文考虑了这样一种方法。方法:本文以俄亥俄州为例,探讨公共和私人一体化问题。俄亥俄州是一个大州(人口1120万),与许多其他州有着相同的人口、文化和政治特征。俄亥俄州实施社区心理健康改革的成功经验使其成为评估付费保险和公共心理健康护理潜在整合问题的良好候选者。结果:分析表明,俄亥俄州公共系统目前使用的资源可能足以支持住院和门诊精神健康治疗(通常由保险支付的医疗保健类型)的保险融资,同时将支持性服务(如住房、危机护理)作为剩余安全网。讨论:目前,这些资源在州和地方心理健康预算中,以及为低收入和残疾人提供医疗服务的医疗补助计划中。分析表明,在俄亥俄州雇员的保险计划中,用于住院和门诊心理健康治疗的资源总额大大高于用于此类护理的支出。该分析的一个实质性限制是,无法将相对健康的就业人口与贫困和残疾人口的护理需求进行比较。结论:论文得出的结论是,在美国,商业/雇主支付保险和公共心理健康护理的“两级”制度存在着实质性的结构性、经济和社会问题。通过研究一个州公共系统的数据,该论文进一步得出结论,如果重新部署公共资源并继续私人捐款,那么资助一个单一的急性和动态心理健康福利系统可能是可行的。对政策和研究的影响:鉴于美国心理健康护理的两级方法存在实质性问题,建议进一步考虑和分析公共和私人融合的可行性。考虑到这项工作的复杂性,需要更复杂的分析。然而,考虑到现在可能有足够的资源来完成一体化,建议开展进一步的工作。©1998 John Wiley&;有限公司。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
6.20%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: The Journal of Mental Health Policy and Economics publishes high quality empirical, analytical and methodologic papers focusing on the application of health and economic research and policy analysis in mental health. It offers an international forum to enable the different participants in mental health policy and economics - psychiatrists involved in research and care and other mental health workers, health services researchers, health economists, policy makers, public and private health providers, advocacy groups, and the pharmaceutical industry - to share common information in a common language.
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