公共雇员的行为健康福利:心理健康平等立法的影响。

P C Borzi, S Rosenbaum
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摘要

随着1996年《精神健康平等法案》(MHPA)的通过,国会采取了重要的第一步,要求身体和精神疾病之间的年度和终身费用限制相同,从而使医疗计划中身体和精神疾病之间的治疗平等。但该法案的范围有限:它没有强制规定精神健康福利,也没有禁止其他常见的生理和心理疾病的区别,例如更高的费用分摊或门诊就诊或住院治疗的较低限制。在1996年国会采取行动之前,一些州已经采取了某种形式的平等要求。自1996年以来,国家平价活动加速了。最近,卫生服务研究和政策中心通过美国卫生和人类服务部药物滥用和精神健康服务管理局的拨款,审查了八个州为州雇员提供精神健康福利的合同,以评估立法尝试要求身体和精神疾病之间的平等是否会导致州雇员行为健康福利的显著差异。我们得出的结论是,除了那些强制要求对某些或所有类型的精神疾病实行完全均等的州外,州政府雇员的行为健康福利并没有因为州均等法而发生显著变化,因为他们仍然受到传统的限制,例如,与对身体疾病施加的限制相比,更高的费用分摊和对门诊就诊和住院治疗天数的更大限制。因此,各州围绕精神健康均等开展的大量活动可能对州雇员获得精神健康服务的机会影响不大,因为尽管州法律要求同等的美元限额,但它们通常允许继续采用其他对精神健康覆盖面限制更大的计划设计特点。然而,我们审查的许多合同是多年合同,可能没有完全反映最近的国家活动。此外,如果国会在《精神健康平价法案》于2001年9月到期后对其进行更新,并扩大该法案的范围,使其涵盖其他一些计划设计特征,那么那些平价法律更有限的州可能会效仿。在这种情况下,也许患有精神疾病的政府雇员将来会看到重大变化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Behavioral health benefits for public employees: effect of mental health parity legislation.

With the passage of the Mental Health Parity Act of 1996 (MHPA), Congress took an important first step toward equalizing treatment under medical plans between physical and mental illnesses by requiring parity in annual and lifetime dollar limits between physical and mental illness. But the Act was limited in scope: it did not mandate mental health benefits nor prohibit other common types of differentials between physical and mental illnesses, such as higher cost-sharing or lower limits on outpatient visits or inpatient treatments. Before Congress' action in 1996, a few of the states had adopted some type of parity requirement. Since 1996, state parity activity has accelerated.Recently, the Center for Health Services Research and Policy through a grant from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, examined contracts providing for mental health benefits for state employees in eight states to assess whether legislative attempts to require parity between physical and mental illnesses resulted in noticeable differences in behavioral health benefits for state employees. We concluded that, except in states that have mandated full parity for some or all types of mental illnesses, behavioral health benefits for state employees have not changed significantly as a result of the state parity laws, since they still remain subject to traditional restrictions, such as higher cost-sharing and greater limitations on outpatient visits and inpatient treatment days, than those imposed on physical illnesses. Thus the considerable state activity surrounding mental health parity may have little effect on state employees' access to mental health services, since although state laws required parity in dollar limitations, they generally permitted the continuation of other plan design features that are more restrictive for mental health coverage. However, many of the contracts we examined were multi-year contract and may not have fully reflected recent state activity. Moreover, if Congress renews the Mental Health Parity Act when it expires in September, 2001, and expands the scope of the Act to cover some of these other plan design features, states with more limited parity laws are likely to follow. In that case, perhaps state employees with mental illnesses may see significant change in the future.

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