Literature DB >> 30807450

Association of Federal Mental Health Parity Legislation With Health Care Use and Spending Among High Utilizers of Services.

Rebecca L Haffajee1, Michelle M Mello2, Fang Zhang3, Alisa B Busch4,5,6, Alan M Zaslavsky6, J Frank Wharam3.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Decades-long efforts to require parity between behavioral and physical health insurance coverage culminated in the comprehensive federal Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act.
OBJECTIVES: To determine the association between federal parity and changes in mental health care utilization and spending, particularly among high utilizers. RESEARCH
DESIGN: Difference-in-differences analyses compared changes before and after exposure to federal parity versus a comparison group.
SUBJECTS: Commercially insured enrollees aged 18-64 with a mental health disorder drawn from 24 states where self-insured employers were newly subject to federal parity in 2010 (exposure group), but small employers were exempt before-and-after parity (comparison group). A total of 11,226 exposure group members were propensity score matched (1:1) to comparison group members, all of whom were continuously enrolled from 1 year prepolicy to 1-2 years postpolicy. MEASURES: Mental health outpatient visits, out-of-pocket spending for these visits, emergency department visits, and hospitalizations.
RESULTS: Relative to comparison group members, mean out-of-pocket spending per outpatient mental health visit declined among exposure enrollees by $0.74 (1.40, 0.07) and $2.03 (3.17, 0.89) in years 1 and 2 after the policy, respectively. Corresponding annual mental health visits increased by 0.31 (0.12, 0.51) and 0.59 (0.37, 0.81) per enrollee. Difference-in-difference changes were larger for the highest baseline quartile mental health care utilizers [year 2: 0.76 visits per enrollee (0.14, 1.38); relative increase 10.07%] and spenders [year 2: $-2.28 (-3.76, -0.79); relative reduction 5.91%]. There were no significant difference-in-differences changes in emergency department visits or hospitalizations.
CONCLUSIONS: In 24 states, commercially insured high utilizers of mental health services experienced modest increases in outpatient mental health visits 2 years postparity.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 30807450      PMCID: PMC6423539          DOI: 10.1097/MLR.0000000000001076

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Care        ISSN: 0025-7079            Impact factor:   2.983


  29 in total

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Authors:  Howard H Goldman; Richard G Frank; M Audrey Burnam; Haiden A Huskamp; M Susan Ridgely; Sharon-Lise T Normand; Alexander S Young; Colleen L Barry; Vanessa Azzone; Alisa B Busch; Susan T Azrin; Garrett Moran; Carolyn Lichtenstein; Margaret Blasinsky
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5.  Mental Health Spending and Intensity of Service Use Among Individuals With Diagnoses of Eating Disorders Following Federal Parity.

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6.  A bayesian two-part latent class model for longitudinal medical expenditure data: assessing the impact of mental health and substance abuse parity.

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8.  The impact of parity on major depression treatment quality in the Federal Employees' Health Benefits Program after parity implementation.

Authors:  Alisa B Busch; Haiden A Huskamp; Sharon-Lise T Normand; Alexander S Young; Howard Goldman; Richard G Frank
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9.  Mental Health Services Utilization and Expenditures Among Children Enrolled in Employer-Sponsored Health Plans.

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10.  The effects of mental health parity on spending and utilization for bipolar, major depression, and adjustment disorders.

Authors:  Alisa B Busch; Frank Yoon; Colleen L Barry; Vanessa Azzone; Sharon-Lise T Normand; Howard H Goldman; Haiden A Huskamp
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1.  Impact of Mental Health Insurance Legislation on Mental Health Treatment in a Longitudinal Sample of Adolescents.

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