Mental Health Symptoms

Mental Health Parity California

Mental Health as an essential benefit under ACA Health Care Reform
Parity Laws – Mental Health must be equal to Medical Benefits

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Many people come to this page because they want a simple answer: does health insurance have to cover mental health treatment?
In many situations, the answer is yes. California law and federal parity rules generally require mental health coverage to be handled more like other medically necessary health care, not pushed aside or limited unfairly.

This page starts with the basic California protections first, then moves into federal rules, Medicare information, and research links further below.

California Mental Health Coverage Protections

California has long required important mental health coverage protections. For many health insurance policies, treatment for severe mental illnesses and serious emotional disturbances of a child must be covered under terms that are comparable to other medical conditions. In plain English, that means mental health treatment cannot simply be brushed aside as less important than treatment for a physical illness.

Depending on the policy and the medical necessity of the treatment, coverage may include outpatient visits, inpatient hospital services, partial hospitalization, and prescription drug benefits when the policy includes prescription coverage. This is one reason California mental health parity deserves to be listed first on this page.

California law has also expanded access protections over time, including rules intended to improve how quickly patients can get follow-up appointments for mental health and substance use disorder care.

What “Parity” Means

The word parity basically means mental health benefits should be treated more like medical and surgical benefits.

  • Copays and deductibles should not be structured to unfairly disadvantage mental health treatment.
  • Visit limits and treatment limits should not be more restrictive just because the care is for mental health or substance use.
  • Prior authorization and utilization review rules should be applied fairly.
  • Network access matters too. A plan should not appear to cover treatment while making it unreasonably difficult to actually find a participating provider.

Federal Mental Health Parity Rules

Federal law also matters. The federal mental health parity rules generally prevent health plans that offer mental health or substance use disorder benefits from imposing financial requirements or treatment limits that are more restrictive than those used for medical or surgical benefits.

This is especially important when a consumer runs into barriers such as repeated prior authorization demands, narrow networks, or treatment limitations that do not seem comparable to the way a plan handles other medical conditions.

If California parity is the foundation of this page, federal parity helps reinforce those protections.

How To Use This Page

  1. Identify what kind of coverage you have: individual plan, employer group plan, Medicare, or other coverage.
  2. Check your Evidence of Coverage, Summary of Benefits, and provider directory.
  3. Look for limits on visits, copays, deductibles, prior authorization, and network access.
  4. If treatment is denied, delayed, or difficult to access, keep records of the problem.  Check out IMR  Independent Medical Review 
  5. Use the research materials and links below if you need more technical detail.

Common Problems Consumers Run Into

  • A provider says they are not really accepting the insurance even though they appear in the directory.
  • The plan approves only limited treatment or delays authorization.
  • Follow-up appointments are scheduled too far out.
  • A consumer cannot tell whether a denial is based on real medical review or poor network access.
  • People are told mental health treatment is “covered,” but in practice they cannot find care.

Need Immediate Help?

If someone is in crisis or needs urgent mental health support, use emergency resources right away.

For immediate emergencies, call 911. For mental health crisis support, call or text 988.

Medicare and Mental Health Coverage

Medicare beneficiaries may also need mental health coverage information, but Medicare works differently than many individual and employer plans. That is why Medicare resources are best placed lower on this page, after the California and federal parity overview.

If you want, Medicare-specific mental health coverage details can later be split into a separate section or even a separate page so this page stays focused and easier to scan.

Research and Legal References

Scroll down and/or visit our child/subpages

This page is intended as general educational information about health coverage and mental health parity rules. It is not legal advice or medical advice.

AB 88 California Mental Health Parity

#California Mental Health Insurance Parity

Summary:

SB 221   Return Visit Guarantees 

SB 221   requires that Mental health and substance abuse patients be offered return appointments no more than 10 days after a previous session, unless their provider OKs less frequent visits. CA HealthLine  *  CA Health Line 11.24.2021 *

Our webpage on how to read a contact and Insurance Policy

Severe Mental Illness Coverage
AB 88 – Insurance Code §10144.5

(a) Every policy of disability (health) insurance that covers hospital, medical, or surgical expenses in this state* … shall provide coverage for the diagnosis and medically necessary treatment of severe mental illnesses of a person of any age, and of serious emotional disturbances of a child, … under the same terms and conditions applied to other medical conditions,

(b) These benefits shall include the following:

(1) Outpatient services.

(2) Inpatient hospital services.

(3) Partial hospital services.

(4) Prescription drugs, if the policy or contract includes     coverage for prescription drugs.

How to obtain, get or find these benefits?

(c) The terms and conditions applied to the benefits required by this section that shall be applied equally to all benefits under the disability (Health, Medical)  insurance policy shall include, but not be limited to, the following:

(1) Maximum lifetime benefits.

(2) Co-payments and coinsurance.

(3) Individual and family deductibles.

 (d) For the purposes of this section, “severe mental illnesses” shall include [these diagnosis]:

(1)  schizophrenia.com/ *

(2) Schizoaffective disorder. ***  WedMD

(3) Bipolar disorder (manic-depressive illness). bipolar.com/***  WebMD

(4) Major depressive disorders. ***  WebMD

(5) Panic disorder. ***  WebMD

(6) Obsessive-compulsive disorder.***  WebMD

(7) Pervasive developmental disorder WebMD  or autism. *** Web MD

(8) Anorexia nervosa. *** WebMD

(9) Bulimia nervosa.  ***   WebMD

(e) For the purposes of this section, a child suffering from, “serious emotional disturbances of a child” shall be defined as a child who

(1) has one or more mental disorders as identified in the most recent edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders,  other than a primary substance use disorder or developmental disorder, that result in behavior inappropriate to the child’s age according to expected developmental norms, and …

Mental Health Parity at a Crossroads

California Law Aims to Strengthen Access to Mental Health Services

Mental Health

  • Mental is an essential mandated benefit under ACA/ObamaCare/Health Care Reform
  • All Insurance plans – QHP  qualified health plan (Obama Care compliant-meeting the 10 essential benefits) must provide parity equal coverage for mental health and substance use services as for other conditions, illness and accident resulting in no added treatment limits and no extra costs, co pays, deductibles..
  • More than 43 million Americans suffer from depression, anxiety, and other mental health conditions. But more than half the people who felt like they needed help last year, never got it. Even people who had insurance complained of barriers to care, like Narrow Provider Lists?  Some said they still couldn’t afford it; some were embarrassed to ask for help. Others just couldn’t get through the red tape.
  • Hopefully, the ACA mandate and parity laws will help remedy the problem.

Information, links and resources

 

 Call 988 for Mental Health Emergencies

Mid July 2022 there is supposed to be a new # to call, just like 911 for Mental Health Emergencies, but the funding doesn't see to be there for California.

Mental Health

What is Mental Illness?

Resources & Links

 

 

 

 

 

Get instant term life quotes

Delusional Disorder  

  • Wikipedia on delusional disorder
  • Mental Health.org of New Zealand
  • What Causes Psychotic Disorders?
    • The exact cause of psychotic disorders is not known, but researchers believe that many factors may play a role. Some psychotic disorders tend to run in families, suggesting that the tendency, or likelihood, to develop the disorder may be inherited. Environmental factors may also play a role in their development, including stress, drug abuse and major life changes.
      • These disorders most often first appear when a person is in his or her late teens, 20s or 30s.

more details below
More details and citations below

Federal Mental Health Parity 

FEDERAL – Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008

Mental Health Bill of Rights

 

The Mental Health Parity Act of 1996 (MHPA)

 

  • MHPA is a federal law that may prevent your group health plan from placing annual or lifetime dollar limits on mental health benefits that are lower – less favorable – than annual or lifetime dollar limits for medical and surgical benefits offered under the plan.  Learn more on Wikipedia Mental Health Parity Act 1996
  • The act removes separate treatment limitations for mental health and chemical dependency benefits (including number of visits, days of coverage, and annual dollar limits) and requires cost sharing for these services to be equal to or less than the cost sharing for other health care services. (Federal Mental  Health Parity Act of 2007 NAMI More on Mental Health Parity NAMI) Public Law 110–343 wikipedia.org/110-343
  • MHPA applies to most group health plans with more than 50 workers. MHPA does NOT apply to group health plans sponsored by employers with fewer than 51 workers. MHPA also does NOT apply to health insurance coverage in the individual market.
  • MHPA is a federal law that requires that annual or lifetime dollar limits on mental health benefits provided by a group health plan be no lower than the annual or lifetime dollar limits for medical and surgical benefits offered by that plan. MHPA applies to employers with more than 50 employees. For up to date information on the applicability of the Mental Health Parity Act, contact the EBSA regional office nearest you.

The MHPA does not prohibit group health plans from:

Covering mental health services within network only, even though the plan will  pay for out of network services for

  • medical/surgical benefits (although with  higher out-of-pocket cost to the subscriber);
  • Increasing co-payments or limiting the number of visits for mental health  benefits;
  • Imposing limits on the number of covered visits, even if the plan does not impose  similar visit limits for medical and surgical benefits; and
  • Having different cost-sharing arrangements, such as higher coinsurance payments for mental health benefits, as compared to medical and surgical benefits
  • .A visit limit coupled with a usual, customary, and reasonable (UCR) charge is not  the equivalent of an annual or lifetime dollar limit. As a result, it is not a  violation of the MHPA requirements.  Payments made by the plan on the basis of  UCR charges will vary from one case to the next.
  • What is not permitted is a limit  on the number of visits, together with a fixed dollar limit per visit, for example,  60 visits annually at $50 per visit (totaling $3,000), unless the medical-surgical  coverage is the same.cms.hhs.gov

Resources & Links

Maximum #a190 Medicare Psychiatric Inpatient Days?

 

Specimen Individual Policy #EOC with Definitions

Employer Group Sample Policy

It's often so much easier and simpler to just read your Evidence of Coverage EOC-policy, then look all over for the codes, laws, regulations etc!  Plus, EOC's are mandated to be written in PLAIN ENGLISH!

 

VIDEO Steve Explains how to read EOC

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