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An Introduction to Mental Health Services

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Title: An Introduction to Mental Health Services


1
An Introduction to Mental Health Services
  • Susan L. Ettner, Ph.D.
  • Professor
  • UCLA Schools of Medicine
  • and Public Health

2
What is a Mental Disorder?
  • Significant clinical syndrome with behavioral
    and psychological symptoms, causing distress or
    impairment in functioning (DSM-IV)
  • Symptoms of prevalent mental disorders include
  • Anxiety (fear and dread)
  • Psychosis (hallucinations and delusions)
  • Mood disturbance (prolonged sadness or euphoria)
  • Cognitive impairment (ability to organize,
    process and recall information)
  • Somatic symptoms (decreased appetite, insomnia,
    pain, hyperventilation)

3
Other Important Definitions
  • Substance Abuse Disorder
  • A maladaptive pattern of substance use leading to
    clinically significant impairment or distress
    (DSM-IV)
  • Severe Mental Illness (SMI)
  • Any DSM-III-R mental disorder that leads to
    substantial interference with one or more major
    life activities (PL 102-321)
  • Severe and Persistent Mental Illness (SPMI)
  • Disorders that are chronic in addition to causing
    severe functional impairment
  • Serious Emotional Disturbance (SED)
  • Conditions associated with severe functional
    impairment in children.

4
Why Is Mental Health Different?
  • Greater stigma, especially among certain groups
    (e.g. elderly, some minority populations)
  • Greater information deficits
  • Cognitive and perceptual impairment
  • Lack of family to act as health care proxies
  • Greater variability in treatment, due to
    uncertainty about diagnosis and treatment
    effectiveness
  • Although DSM is the gold standard for
    diagnoses, mental health is a continuum on which
    the threshold for specific disorders is not
    always clear
  • Difficult to standardize psychosocial treatments

5
Why Is Mental Health Different?
  • Strong barriers to purchasing individual
    insurance coverage
  • Only 11 states guarantee some form of access
  • In other states, carriers deny access to persons
    with mental disorders more frequently than
    persons with comparable medical conditions (52
    of the time vs. 30)
  • Even among insured, less generous coverage under
    both private and public insurance programs
  • Larger role of federal, state, and local
    government in both financing and delivery

6
Prevalence and Cost of MH/SA disorders
7
Point 1 Mental Disorders Are CommonEstimated
12-month Prevalence of Mental Disorders, SMI and
SPMI
 
Any MH disorder 23.9   SMI 5.4   SPMI 2.6
8
Prevalence by Type of MH Disorder
9
International Comparisons
Twelve-month Prevalence of MH/SA Disorders
10
Point 2 MH/SA Disorders Are Costly
  • Global Burden of Disease Study Neuropsychiatric
    disorders account for 24 of all
    disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) lost
  • MH/SA disorders often have early onset, resulting
    in high lifetime costs

11
MH/SA Treatment Costs
  • Treatment costs (2001)
  • 85 billion for mental disorders
  • 18.3 billion for substance abuse
  • Prevention less of an option because etiology of
    psychiatric disorders generally uncertain
  • Difficulty in obtaining data to study this.
    Would need panel data that follows infant through
    adulthood.
  • Genes vs. environment debate
  • Work done on prevention tends to focus on children

12
Point 3 MH/SA Treatment Is Cost-Effective
  • Despite the high cost of MH/SA services,
    treatment is often cost-effective because of the
    high social costs.
  • Example Clark et al. (1999)
  • Found that the effective treatment of substance
    abuse disorders among persons with mental illness
    was associated with fewer arrests and
    incarcerations.
  • Mean cost associated with an arrest was 2,295
    per person.
  • Thus, if effective treatment results in fewer
    arrests, this may result in substantial savings
    for the legal system.

13
Brief History Development of the U.S. MH
Treatment System
14
Brief History Financing, Organization, and
Delivery of Mental Health Services
  • Colonial era
  • People with mental illness largely cared for by
    families no available treatments.
  • Early 19th century (urbanization begins)
  • Treatments were very crude. Little scientific
    understanding of mental illness.
  • Most moderate mental disorders received no
    treatment other than the care from general
    physicians, family, friends, and clergy.
  • Those with SMI who were perceived as a threat to
    their family and community were sent to isolated
    asylums.
  • States had sole responsibility for financing and
    delivery of MH services until WWII.

15
Brief History Financing, Organization, and
Delivery of MH Services (1940s)
  • Mental Health Act of 1946 introduced federal role
    in financing by providing funding for research
    into the causes, prevention, and treatment of MH
    disorders.
  • In 1949, the National Institute of Mental Health
    was formed.

16
Brief History Financing, Organization, and
Delivery of MH Services (1950s)
  • Split between MH delivery systems
  • Psychiatrists rejected a medical model of
    treatment and were oriented to affluent private
    patients in office-based practice. Some of these
    patients sought treatment because it was
    culturally attractive as a self-realization
    experience.
  • Few psychiatrists worked in U.S. public mental
    hospitals where persons with severe mental
    illness were cared for.

17
Brief History Financing, Organization, and
Delivery of MH Services (1960s-70s)
  • The two MH delivery systems begin to merge.
  • The Community Mental Health Center Act of 1963
    paved the way for deinstitutionalization.
  • Costs shifted from state psychiatric hospitals to
    Federally-funded outpatient CMHCs.
  • The growth of public and private health insurance
    for MH/SA care allowed development of specialized
    MH and SA units in general hospitals.
  • Expanded training of psychologists and social
    workers.
  • Development of new antipsychotics
    antidepressants.

18
Brief History Financing, Organization, and
Delivery of MH Services (1980s)
  • Although psychiatry tilted towards a medical
    model, treatment standards remained unclear.
  • MH/SA insurance continued to expand, but
    employers and insurers limited their liability by
    using greater limitations than for medical
    services.
  • Managed behavioral health organizations (MBHOs)
    began to emerge in response to rising behavioral
    health care costs.
  • Mental disorders continued to be stigmatized.

19
Decade of the Brain (1990s)
  • Congress declared the 1990s to be the Decade of
    the Brain
  • Improved biological understanding of mental
    illness through advances in neuroscience,
    behavioral science, and genetics
  • New psychotropic drugs with fewer side effects
    (e.g. Prozac, Clozapine, Risperadone)
    revolutionized treatment.

20
Financing, Organization, and Delivery of MH/SA
Services Since the 1990s
  • The Shift from Inpatient to
  • Outpatient Care

21
Shift from Inpatient to Outpatient Care
  • Development of new psychotropic medications with
    better tolerated side-effect profiles made the
    treatment of many MH disorders on an outpatient
    basis more feasible.
  • As a result of growth in managed care, outpatient
    care emphasized in lieu of inpatient care in
    order to contain MH/SA expenditures.

22
Shift from Inpatient to Outpatient Care
Distribution of MH/SA spending in the private
sector
23
Financing, Organization, and Delivery of MH/SA
Services Since the 1990s
  • Barriers to MH/SA Care

24
Difficulties in Obtaining Needed Mental Health
Services Anecdotal Evidence
  • Informal survey by APA members reported
    psychiatric bed shortages in 16 states.
  • Psychiatric beds in the Twin Cities area are in
    such short supply, patients often travel out of
    state for inpatient care.
  • In Massachusetts, CMHCs are turning away
    uninsured patients because the state provides no
    funding to these clinics for outpatient care.
  • A Washington Post story reported that a mother in
    Maryland called 30 clinicians to obtain MH care
    for her daughter, but none of them would accept
    the fees paid by her MBHO.

25
Major Barriers to Optimal MH/SA Care
  • Stigma attached to mental illness
  • Fragmentation of the delivery system
  • Geographic disparities
  • Racial and ethnic disparities
  • Mismatch between use and need for services
  • Inadequate insurance coverage (lack of parity)
    and/or financial resources by the affected
    population

26
Stigma
  • Stigma of persons with MH disorders has persisted
    throughout history. Two of the important roots
    of stigma come from
  • Misguided split between mind and body first
    proposed by Descartes.
  • 19th century split between the MH treatment
    system and mainstream medical care.
  • Stigma causes others to avoid working with,
    socializing with, renting to, or employing
    persons with mental disorders.
  • Stigma deters the public from seeking needed
    MH/SA services or from wanting to pay for care.

27
Fragmentation
  • Financing, organization, and delivery of MH
    services is very fragmented. The federal
    government alone operates 42 different programs
    that serve those with mental disorders.
  • Delivery of services provided within four general
    sectors without coordination (de facto system).
  • Mental health specialty sector
  • General medical providers
  • Human services (e.g. social welfare, schools)
  • Voluntary support network

28
De Facto Mental Health Services Delivery System
Although not included on the chart, informal
care givers also play an important role.
29
Geographic Disparities
  • Relative to those in urban areas, those with MH
    disorders in rural areas often have
  • inadequate access to care
  • lower family incomes
  • greater social stigma
  • lower likelihood of having private health
    insurance
  • Almost all rural counties in the U.S. have a
    shortage of psychiatrists, psychologists, and
    social workers.
  • Many primary care physicians in rural areas are
    unprepared to treat mental illnesses.

30
Geographic Disparities (contd)
  • As a result of these barriers, those with MH
    disorders in rural areas
  • Enter care later in the course of their disease
    than their urban counterparts
  • Enter care with more serious, persistent, and
    disabling symptoms than their urban counterparts
  • Require more expensive and intensive treatment
    than their urban counterparts

31
Racial and Ethnic Disparities
  • Treatment system has not incorporated
    understanding of the histories, traditions,
    beliefs, languages, and value systems of
    culturally diverse groups.
  • Racial and ethnic minorities are
    under-represented among mental health
    professions.
  • Native Americans, African-Americans, Asian-
    Americans and Latinos bear a disproportionately
    high burden of disability from mental disorders.
  • Higher burden is not due to higher prevalence
    rates
  • Due instead to barriers to high quality care,
    e.g., African-Americans are more likely to be
    overdiagnosed for schizophrenia and
    underdiagnosed for major depression.

32
Racial and Ethnic Disparities (contd)
  • The report Mental Health Culture, Race, and
    Ethnicity, A Supplement to Mental Health A
    Report of the Surgeon General highlighted the
    following disparities for minorities in the MH
    treatment system.
  • They are less likely to have access to available
    MH services
  • They are less likely to receive needed MH care
  • They often receive poorer quality of care
  • They are significantly under-represented in MH
    research

33
Mismatch Between Use and Need (1)
  • Studies have reported that the use of mental
    health services is poorly matched to need
  • 15 of adults receive mental health services each
    year
  • Of the adults who receive mental health services
    each year, only 1/2 have a diagnosable disorder.
  • Of the adults with a diagnosable disorder, only
    1/3 obtain mental health services.
  • 21 of children receive mental health services
    each year
  • More than half of children with diagnosable
    disorders do not receive treatment.

34
Mismatch Between Use and Need (2)
  • Studies of mismatch used the prevalence of MH
    disorders as the yardstick to measure need.
  • Others have argued that prevalence is not the
    best measure of need for MH treatment
  • For example, MH prevalence estimates from the
    National Comorbidity Survey are said to be
    inflated because its definitions are too
    expansive.

35
Mismatch Between Use and Need (3)
  • Possible definitions of need
  • Felt need- What people say they want or what they
    think their problems are.
  • Expressed need- Demonstrated by peoples use or
    demand for services.
  • Normative need- Determined by experts on the
    basis of research or professional opinion.
  • To appropriately define need for MH services, one
    must consider the following for each individual
  • Duration and re-occurrence of the MH disorder
  • Associated distress and disability of the MH
    disorder
  • Likelihood that treatment will be beneficial

36
Mismatch Between Use and Need (4)
  • Another way to examine the mismatch between use
    and need is to examine the use of services by
    severity.
  • Even among those with a serious MH disorder,
    only half received MH treatment. These figures
    may provide a more accurate picture of the
    mismatch between use and need.

37
Inadequate Insurance Coverage
  • High out-of-pocket costs pose a major impediment
    to peoples willingness and ability to obtain
    psychiatric treatment
  • Question Why is insurance coverage worse for
    mental health and substance abuse services?
  • Stigma (already discussed)
  • Adverse selection
  • Moral hazard

38
Adverse Selection
  • Persons with mental disorders more likely to
    self-select into generous insurance plans
  • MH/SA disorders are often chronic and severe
  • Patients have higher medical as well as
    behavioral health care costs
  • Risk adjustment doesnt work well enough to
    compensate plans for enrolling sickest patients
  • Insurer response is to avoid these patients by
    offering minimal MH/SA coverage and poor quality
    in a rush to the bottom

39
Moral Hazard
  • Moral hazard is the demand response to enhanced
    insurance coverage
  • Demand response is much larger for mental health
    services than general medical care
  • Results from the RAND Health Insurance Experiment
    suggested that MH costs increase twice as much as
    medical costs when cost-sharing requirements are
    lowered by equal amounts
  • Insurer response is to increase cost-sharing or
    use gatekeeping mechanism

40
Financing, Organization, and Delivery of MH/SA
Services Since the 1990s
  • Role of Insurance

41
Role of Public Insurance
  • The public sector plays an important role in the
    organization and delivery of MH services
  • Historical reasons Public sector role predates
    modern insurance markets.
  • Externalities Mental illness leads to
    unemployment, caregiver burden, violence,
    homelessness, motor vehicle accidents, child
    abuse and neglect, unsafe sex, etc.
  • Disability Mental illness can lead to
    substantial disability and functional impairment.

42
Public Insurance Programs
  • The public sector often serves those with the
    most severe and disabling MH disorders, such as
    schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.
  • Some of these programs include
  • State mental health and substance abuse agencies
  • Medicare and Social Security Disability Insurance
    (SSDI)
  • Medicaid and Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
  • Department of Veteran Affairs

43
State- and County-Funded Services
  • The role of state and county psychiatric
    hospitals has been declining between 1972 and
    2000, the number of beds dropped from 361,765 to
    54,000.
  • The closing of state-run psychiatric hospitals
    has led to concerns about access to care for the
    most vulnerable patient populations. State-run
    hospitals were providers of last resort for
    patients who
  • are violent or disruptive
  • require long stays
  • are uninsured
  • Private hospitals thought to engage in
    cream-skimming and dumping wont pick up
    slack?

44
Medicare
  • Medicare imposes stricter limits on coverage for
    MH/SA than medical care.
  • 50 coinsurance rate for MH/SA outpatient visits
    other than initial evaluation and psychotropic
    drug management
  • Coinsurance for medical services is only 20
  • 190-day lifetime limit on psychiatric hospital
    stays, but no limit on general hospital days
  • Benzodiazepines one of the few drugs that are
    specifically excluded from MMA coverage

45
Medicaid
  • Medicaid also imposes special restrictions on
    MH/SA coverage.
  • Does not pay for adult (age 22-64) stays within
    institutions for mental disease (IMD).
  • IMDs include psychiatric hospitals and nursing
    homes specializing in psychiatric services
  • Elderly covered because Medicaid is secondary
    payer, after Medicare
  • Some states also exclude psychiatric hospital
    care for children.

46
Private Insurance
  • 75 of employers restrict coverage more for
    behavioral health care than for medical care,
    although there is some evidence this disparity
    may be declining over time.
  • Restrictions may include
  • Lower inpatient day limits
  • Lower lifetime expenditure caps
  • Lower annual dollar limits
  • Lower outpatient visit limits
  • Higher coinsurance and/or copayment
  • Gatekeeping (even when medical care is
    unmanaged)

47
Comparison of Selected Design Features for a
Typical Employer Health Planin 1999
48
Managed Mental Health Care
  • The application of managed care to mental health
    takes several forms
  • HMOs, PPOs, and POS plans typically provide some
    coverage for MH/SA services within their broader
    benefits package.
  • Employers, HMOs, PPOs, and POS plans may contract
    with managed behavioral health organizations
    (MBHOs), also known as carve-outs, to manage the
    MH/SA services of their enrollees.
  • MBHOs are managed care organizations that
    specialize in MH/SA services.

49
Growth of Managed Mental Health Care
  • Percent of Medicaid beneficiaries enrolled in
    managed care organizations (MCOs) rose from 14
    in 1993 to 59 in 2003
  • All but three states have some form of Medicaid
    managed care program
  • MBHOs dominate the market for private mental
    health coverage, with enrollment climbing from
    from 70 million in 1993 to 169 million in 2000

50
Enrollment in Managed Behavioral Health Care
Industry
51
Arguments in Favor of Carve-Outs
  • Vendors specializing in behavioral health are
    better able to manage quality and costs
  • Economies of scale and scope in setting up
    specialty networks
  • Separate budget protects MH/SA funding
  • Carve-outs prevent adverse selection by patients
    and cream-skimming and dumping by competing
    insurance plans
  • Only works if single vendor is used

52
Arguments Against Carve-Outs
  • Poor integration of medical and behavioral health
    care, especially for elderly
  • Unclear whether managed care plans can meet the
    needs of chronically ill patients
  • Higher administrative costs
  • Incentives for cost-shifting between the medical
    and behavioral health care vendors
  • May be beneficial if cost-shifting leads to
    greater detection
  • Stigmatization of carved-out services
  • Potentially less control over providers, since
    carve-outs tend to use FFS reimbursement

53
Addressing the Barriers to MH/SA Treatment
  • The Push for Parity

54
The Push for Parity
  • Problem Different coverage of MH/SA disorders
    and general medical care leads to financial risk
    and inequities for those with behavioral health
    conditions.
  • Recent efforts to pass parity laws to level the
    playing field.
  • Federal parity law passed in 1996 is weak, so
    there has been a push to pass state parity
    legislation.

55
Federal Mental Health Parity Act of 1996
  • Plans offering MH benefits could no longer have
    lower annual and lifetime spending limits on MH
    services than general medical services.
  • Many exemptions
  • Individual coverage
  • Employers with lt50 employees
  • Group plans whose claims costs increased gt1
  • Also did not prevent plans from requiring higher
    cost-sharing for MH, imposing visit limits, or
    dropping MH benefits altogether.

56
Impact of 1996 Mental Health Parity Act
  • Among 863 employers answering a GAO survey who
    were subject to the law, percent reporting parity
    in dollar limits grew from 55 in 1996 to 86 in
    1999
  • However, most of the newly compliant employers
    reported changing plans to be more restrictive in
    terms of utilization limits
  • Law rarely resulted in higher claims costs
  • However, effects of parity legislation will
    depend on how managed the care is

57
Impact of 1996 Mental Health Parity Act
Compliant Employer Plans Reporting More
Restrictive Limits on MH Benefits than for
General Medical Services
58
Impact of 1996 Mental Health Parity Act
Employers Plans That Have Further Restricted MH
Benefits Since 1996
59
State Mental Health Parity Legislation
  • By 1994
  • Only 22 states required plans to cover any MH
    Services
  • 9 states required only that plans make coverage
    available
  • 19 states had no mandate
  • 1996- Federal parity law passed
  • By 1998
  • 14 states had passed stronger parity legislation
    than Federal law
  • However, ERISA makes it impossible for states to
    mandate benefits for all privately insured, since
    self-insured are exempt
  • 2000- California passed a parity law

60
California State Assembly Bill 88(Mental Health
Parity Law)
  • As of July 2000, plans required to cover the
    diagnosis and medically necessary treatment of
    selected mental conditions under the same terms
    and condition applied to other medical
    conditions
  • Benefits include outpatient, inpatient, partial
    hospitalization, and (if applicable) prescription
    drugs

61
CA State Assembly Bill 88 (contd)
  • Covered conditions include
  • Schizophrenia
  • Schizoaffective disorder
  • Bipolar disorder
  • Major depression
  • Obsessive-compulsive disorder
  • Panic disorder
  • Eating disorders (anorexia/bulimia)
  • SED for children and adolescents

62
CA State Assembly Bill 88 (contd)
  • Terms and conditions covered by law include (but
    are not limited to) the following
  • Maximum lifetime benefits
  • Copayments
  • Individual family deductibles
  • As usual, self-funded medical plans are
  • exempt under ERISA.

63
Addressing the Barriers to MH/SA Treatment
  • The Presidents New Freedom Commission on Mental
    Health

64
The Presidents New Freedom Commission on Mental
Health
  • April 2002- President Bush announced the creation
    of a committee to conduct a comprehensive review
    of MH care in the U.S.
  • Main goal Recommend improvements to enable
    adults with SMI and children with SED to live,
    work, learn, and participate fully in their
    communities.
  • The commissions assessment The mental health
    system is in shambles.

65
The Presidents New Freedom Commission on Mental
Health
  • The commissions final report was released on
    July 22, 2003. Six main goals put forth in this
    report were
  • Understanding that mental health is essential to
    overall health
  • Making mental health care consumer-driven and
    family-driven
  • Eliminating disparities in MH services
  • Making early MH screening, assessment, and
    referral to services common practice
  • Delivering excellent MH care and accelerating
    research
  • Using IT to improve access to MH care and
    information

66
The Presidents New Freedom Commission on Mental
Health
  • Each of these goals included numerous
    recommendations by the commission, including the
    support of stronger federal legislation for MH
    parity.
  • In spite of the blunt assessment of the MH
    treatment system, there was one key
    recommendation missing from the final report The
    investment of new resources to accomplish these 6
    goals
  • Stronger parity legislation has still not passed
    because the Republican committee chairmen and
    party leaders have not pressed for its enactment.

67
THE END
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