Current:Home > Contact'Gimme a break!' Biden blasts insurance hassles for mental health treatment -FundSphere
'Gimme a break!' Biden blasts insurance hassles for mental health treatment
View
Date:2025-04-24 17:47:16
If you break your arm, you go to the doctor, your insurance (usually) pays. Why is it so much harder to get health insurance to pick up the tab if you have a mental health breakdown?
That's the question President Joe Biden asked yesterday, as he touted new rules he says will get insurance to pay for mental health care more often.
The regulations are part of a proposed rule that would strengthen existing policies already on the books and close loopholes that have left patients with too few options for mental health care covered by insurance.
Biden specifically criticized the reauthorization process — where insurers make patients jump bureaucratic hurdles to get their care paid for.
"You get referrals to see mental health specialists," Biden said at a White House press conference Tuesday, "but when you make the appointment, they say, 'I can't see you until your doctor submits the paperwork and gets special permission from the insurance company.' Gimme a break."
A landmark law in 2008 called the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act tried to fix the parity issues, but insurers found loopholes and ways to avoid paying for care.
For example, it might appear as though an insurer has a good list network of mental health professionals. But in fact many of those therapists and doctors won't take new patients, or are no longer practicing, or are too far away.
Or sometimes insurers would require paperwork to authorize treatment — repeatedly — in order to keep getting treatment. Some families NPR interviewed said the reauthorization could be almost daily.
Serious mental illness is often a life or death situation, but if insurance doesn't cover care, it's a huge out-of-pocket cost. Paying directly, without insurance, for something like inpatient substance abuse treatment can easily cost $100,000 — or more. So even families with resources often end up tapping every source of cash and credit they can.
A Michigan family NPR spoke to last year did just that, mortgaging their house and racking up a bill over $250,000 to care for her son who was suicidal. (NPR agreed not to use the family's last name because it would identify a minor with mental illness.) "All of our savings are gone. How are we going to send our kids to school? How are we going to, like what are we going to do, how are we going to recover from this? I don't know," said mom, Rachel. "Those thoughts in your mind — there's no space for that when you are just trying to keep your child alive."
Out of desperation, some families impoverish themselves to qualify for public insurance like Medicaid. Some forego care and let conditions worsen into a bigger crisis, or end up in the ER.
Here are the three policy changes in Biden's proposed rule:
- Accountability with data. The White House is trying to address the fact there's not a lot of good data — or even clear definitions — to track how patients are affected by insurers' policies. So it hasn't been possible to hold insurers accountable. Under the new rule, the government will be requiring insurers to report on the outcomes of their coverage, showing that the offer patients eqaul access to medical and mental health care.
- Attention to payments and policies. The rule says insurers can't use techniques like prior authorization and narrow networks of few therapists to deny care. It also says insurers have to use similar ways of setting out-of-network payment rates for mental health care as for medical care.
- Expand coverage by closing a loophole. The original mental health parity law said health plans offered by state and local governments didn't have to comply. Updates to the law changed that and this proposed rule implements the change. It means about 200 health plans serving 90,000 people will get the coverage.
The health insurance industry says it agrees with the administration's goals of achieving parity of coverage between mental and physical care, but says the problem is there are not enough physicians and therapists to go around.
"Access to mental health has been, and continues to be, challenging primarily because of a shortage and lack of clinicians," Kristine Grow, a spokesperson for America's Health Insurance Plans, said in a statement.
veryGood! (16516)
Related
- Connie Chiume, Black Panther Actress, Dead at 72: Lupita Nyong'o and More Pay Tribute
- Merriam-Webster picks 'authentic' as 2023 word of the year
- Big Time Rush's Kendall Schmidt and Mica von Turkovich Are Married, Expecting First Baby
- A Dutch museum has sent Crimean treasures to Kyiv after a legal tug-of-war between Russia, Ukraine
- 9/11 hearings at Guantanamo Bay in upheaval after surprise order by US defense chief
- Eric McCormack's wife files for divorce from 'Will & Grace' star after 26 years of marriage
- What to set your thermostat to in the winter, more tips to lower your heating bills
- As Trump’s fraud trial eyes his sweeping financial reports, executive says they’re not done anymore
- Hidden Home Gems From Kohl's That Will Give Your Space a Stylish Refresh for Less
- Kenya raises alarm as flooding death toll rises to 76, with thousands marooned by worsening rains
Ranking
- Sam Taylor
- What to set your thermostat to in the winter, more tips to lower your heating bills
- Russia launches its largest drone attack on Ukraine since start of invasion
- Pope Francis getting antibiotics intravenously for lung problem, limiting appointments, Vatican says
- A New York Appellate Court Rejects a Broad Application of the State’s Green Amendment
- Paris mayor says she’s quitting Elon Musk’s ‘global sewer’ platform X as city gears up for Olympics
- Why Ravens enter bye week as AFC's most dangerous team
- Pope Francis getting antibiotics intravenously for lung problem, limiting appointments, Vatican says
Recommendation
Everything Simone Biles did at the Paris Olympics was amplified. She thrived in the spotlight
Kevin 'Geordie' Walker, guitarist of English rock band Killing Joke, dies of stroke at 64
Contract between Puerto Rico’s government and coal-fired plant operator leaves residents in the dark
The Falcons are the NFL's iffiest division leader. They have nothing to apologize for.
Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
Barstool Sports’ Dave Portnoy Slams Rumors He’s Dating VPR Alum Raquel Leviss
Why Ravens enter bye week as AFC's most dangerous team
Nebraska woman kills huge buck on hunting trip, then gets marriage proposal