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ARTICLE |

How Expensive Is Unlimited Mental Health Care Coverage Under Managed Care? FREE

Roland Sturm, PhD
[+] Author Affiliations

Reprints: Roland Sturm, PhD, RAND, 1700 Main St, Santa Monica, CA 90401 (e-mail: Roland_Sturm@rand.org).


JAMA. 1997;278(18):1533-1537. doi:10.1001/jama.1997.03550180085045
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Objectives.  —To study costs, access, and intensity of mental health care under managed care carve-out plans with generous coverage; compare with assumptions used in policy debates; and simulate the consequences of removing coverage limits for mental health care as required by the Mental Health Parity Act.

Design.  —Claims data from 1995 and 1996 for 24 managed care carve-out plans; all plans offered unlimited mental health coverage with minimal co-payments.

Outcome Measures.  —Probability of care, intensity of care, and total costs broken down by service type and type of enrollee.

Results.  —Assumptions used in last year's policy debate overstate actual managed care costs by a factor of 4 to 8. In the plans studied, costs are lower owing to reduced hospitalization rates, a relative shift to outpatient care, and reduced payments per service. However, access to mental health specialty care increased (7.0% of enrollees) compared with the preceding fee-for-service plans (6.5%) or free care in the RAND Health Insurance Experiment (5.0%). Removing an annual limit of $25000 for mental health care, which is the average among plans currently imposing limits, will increase insurance payments only by about $1 per enrollee per year. Children are the main beneficiaries of expanded benefits.

Conclusions.  —Concerns about costs have stifled many health system reform proposals. However, policy decisions were often based on incorrect assumptions and outdated data that led to dramatic overstimates. For mental health care, the cost consequences of improved coverage under manged care, which by now accounts for most private insurance, are relatively minor.

REFERENCES

Frank RG, McGuire TG.  Estimating costs of mental health and substance abuse coverage . Health Aff (Millwood) . 1995;;14:102-115.
Jensen GA, Morrisey MA, Gafney S, Liston DK.  The new dominance of managed care: insurance trends in the 1990s . Health Aff (Millwood) . 1997;;16:125-136.
Hay/Huggins Co Inc. Health Care Benefit Value Comparison Model, HCBVC Version 6.5, PC Model Users Guide Documentation . Washington, DC: Hay/Huggins Co Inc; 1995;.
O'Grady MJ. Mental Health Parity: Issues and Options in Developing Benefits and Premiums . Washington, DC: Congressional Research Service; 1996;. CRS Report for Congress, 96-466 EPW, US Library of Congress.
Sturm R, McCulloch J. Mental Health and Substance Abuse Benefits in Carve-Out Plans and the Mental Health Parity Act of 1996 . Los Angeles: Research Center on Managed Care for Psychiatric Disorders, University of California, Los Angeles; 1997;. Working Paper No. 105.
Duan N, Manning WG, Morris CN, Newhouse JP.  A comparison of alternative models for the demand of medical care . J Econ Business Statistics . 1983;; 1:115-126.
Newhouse JP. Free for All? Cambridge, Mass; Harvard University Press; 1993;.
Wells KB, Manning WG, Duan N, et al. Cost Sharing and the Demand for Ambulatory Mental Health Services . Santa Monica, Calif: RAND; 1982;. Document R-2960-HHS.
Goldman W, McCulloch J, Sturm R. Costs and Utilization of Mental Health Services Before and After Managed Care . Los Angeles: Research Center on Managed Care for Psychiatric Disorders, University of California, Los Angeles; 1997;. Working Paper No. 108.
Wells KB, Sturm R, Sherbourne C, Meredith LS. Caring for Depression . Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press; 1996;.
Sturm R, Meredith LS, Wells KB.  Provider choice and continuity for the treatment of depression . Med Care . 1996;;34:723-734.
Frank RG, Huskamp HA, McGuire TG, Newhouse JP.  Some economics of mental health carve-outs . Arch Gen Psychiatry . 1996;;53:933-937.

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Use interactive graphics and maps to view and sort country-specific infant and early dhildhood mortality and growth failure data and their association with maternal

Frank RG, McGuire TG.  Estimating costs of mental health and substance abuse coverage . Health Aff (Millwood) . 1995;;14:102-115.
Jensen GA, Morrisey MA, Gafney S, Liston DK.  The new dominance of managed care: insurance trends in the 1990s . Health Aff (Millwood) . 1997;;16:125-136.
Hay/Huggins Co Inc. Health Care Benefit Value Comparison Model, HCBVC Version 6.5, PC Model Users Guide Documentation . Washington, DC: Hay/Huggins Co Inc; 1995;.
O'Grady MJ. Mental Health Parity: Issues and Options in Developing Benefits and Premiums . Washington, DC: Congressional Research Service; 1996;. CRS Report for Congress, 96-466 EPW, US Library of Congress.
Sturm R, McCulloch J. Mental Health and Substance Abuse Benefits in Carve-Out Plans and the Mental Health Parity Act of 1996 . Los Angeles: Research Center on Managed Care for Psychiatric Disorders, University of California, Los Angeles; 1997;. Working Paper No. 105.
Duan N, Manning WG, Morris CN, Newhouse JP.  A comparison of alternative models for the demand of medical care . J Econ Business Statistics . 1983;; 1:115-126.
Newhouse JP. Free for All? Cambridge, Mass; Harvard University Press; 1993;.
Wells KB, Manning WG, Duan N, et al. Cost Sharing and the Demand for Ambulatory Mental Health Services . Santa Monica, Calif: RAND; 1982;. Document R-2960-HHS.
Goldman W, McCulloch J, Sturm R. Costs and Utilization of Mental Health Services Before and After Managed Care . Los Angeles: Research Center on Managed Care for Psychiatric Disorders, University of California, Los Angeles; 1997;. Working Paper No. 108.
Wells KB, Sturm R, Sherbourne C, Meredith LS. Caring for Depression . Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press; 1996;.
Sturm R, Meredith LS, Wells KB.  Provider choice and continuity for the treatment of depression . Med Care . 1996;;34:723-734.
Frank RG, Huskamp HA, McGuire TG, Newhouse JP.  Some economics of mental health carve-outs . Arch Gen Psychiatry . 1996;;53:933-937.
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