1. The Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act Evaluation Study: Impact on Mental Health Financial Requirements among Commercial 'Carve-In' Plans
- Author
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Friedman, Sarah A., Thalmayer, Amber G., Azocar, Francisca, Xu, Haiyong, Harwood, Jessica M., Ong, Michael K., Johnson, Laura Lambert, and Ettner, Susan L.
- Subjects
United States. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services -- Health policy ,Health care costs -- Forecasts and trends ,Behavioral medicine -- Usage ,Health insurance -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Mental health law -- Interpretation and construction ,Government regulation ,Market trend/market analysis ,Business ,Health care industry - Abstract
Objective. Did mental health cost-sharing decrease following implementation of the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA)? Data Source. Specialty mental health copayments, coinsurance, and deductibles, 2008-2013, were obtained from benefits databases for 'carve-in' plans from a national commercial managed behavioral health organization. Study Design. Bivariate and regression-adjusted analyses compare the probability of use and (conditional) level of cost-sharing pre- and postparity. An interaction term is added to compare differential levels of pre- and postparity cost-sharing changes for plans that were and were not already at parity pre-MHPAEA. Findings. Controlling for employer/plan characteristics, MHPAEA is associated with higher intermediate care copayments ($15.9) but lower outpatient ($2.6) copayments among in-network-only plans. Among plans with in- and out-of-network benefits, MHPAEA is associated with lower inpatient ($23.2) and outpatient ($2.5) copayments, but increases in inpatient and intermediate in-network and out-of-network coinsurance (about 1 percentage point). Among the few plans not at parity pre-MHPAEA, changes in use and level of cost-sharing associated with MHPAEA were more dramatic. Conclusion. Mixed evidence that MHPAEA led to more generous mental health benefits may stem from the finding that many plans were already at parity pre-MHPAEA. Future policy focus in mental health may shift to slowing growth in cost-sharing for all health services. Key Words. Mental health, commercial insurance, parity, Historical inequities in generosity between medical and behavioral health (BH) insurance coverage are well documented (Hodgkin et al. 2003; Zuvekas and Meyerhoefer 2006). In 2008, the 110th Congress passed the [...]
- Published
- 2018
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