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Issue: The Presbyterian Washington Office supports H.R. 162/S.
543, the Mental Health Equitable Treatment Act of 2001, which
has been added as an amendment to the Senate version of the
Labor/ Health and Human Services appropriations bill. The House
version of the bill, however, did not contain any similar amendment.
Currently this bill is in conference, where conferees will work
out differences between the two houses. There is a chance that
the mental health parity amendment could be taken out in order
to reach agreement, so there is a great need for constituents
of House conferees to show support for this needed legislation.
If legislators learn that many of their constituents care deeply
about parity in mental health care, the amendment will have
a greater chance of staying in the final version of the bill.
Call: The following are House conferees who need to know that
their constituents support the mental health parity amendment
to the Labor/HHS appropriations bill (H.R. 3061):
- Randy Cunningham (CA)
- Kay Granger (TX)
- Ernest Jim Istook (OK)
- Dan Miller (FL)
- Anne Northup (KY)
- John Peterson (PA)
- Ralph Regula (OH)
- Don Sherwood (PA)
- Roger Wicker (MS)
- Bill Young (FL)
Contact your representative even if he or she is not listed
here. Tell your representative to show his or her support for
mental health parity by urging his or her colleagues to keep
the mental health parity amendment in the Labor/HHS appropriations
bill.
U.S. Capitol Switchboard:
202-224-3121
Ask to be transferred to your legislator's office. It is important
that you call immediately, as the conference will likely finish
in the next two weeks.
Background: The mental health parity amendment in the
Senate version of the Labor/HHS appropriations bill contains
revisions to the Mental Health Parity Act of 1996. This new
legislation would prohibit group health plans from providing
unequal coverage of mental health care compared to medical/surgical
health care. Currently, many group health plans set higher copayments
and deductibles for mental health care and place strict limits
on the number and length of covered hospital stays and doctor
visits for mental illness as compared to physical ailments.
"This is a matter of fairness and justice," said
Sen. Paul Wellstone (Minn.), who introduced the legislation
with Sen. Pete Domenici (NM). Wellstone, who has a daughter
with schizophrenia, and Domenici, whose brother has severe mental
illness, have fought very hard to keep this legislation visible
in a Congressional session heavily involved with actions related
to September 11th. According to the New York Times, the proposed
mental health legislation has a greater chance of passing now
than at any other time in the last decade .
Opponents of mental health parity legislation argue that increased
coverage of mental healthcare needs may result in misuse and
overuse of mental health benefits. They also fear that group
plans may reduce all coverage, limiting physical healthcare
benefits as they have limited mental healthcare benefits in
order to comply with the parity mandate.
However, nearly three dozen states and the federal government
have experimented with parity in treatment, and have found that
costs have not been significant and premiums needed only to
be raised by less than 1 percent. With these minimal costs to
providers and patients, it is unlikely that benefits would be
adversely affected by expanding mental healthcare benefits .
In addition, when mental problems are diagnosed and treatment
is started early and is consistent, the likelihood of recovery
or successful management of mental disorders increases. This
increase is both highly beneficial for patients and their families
and is also cost effective, as early diagnosis and treatment
may prevent worsening of a mental illness that could lead to
missed workdays, involvement with the juvenile justice system
(children with mental disorders), unemployment, or hospitalization.
This legislation is supported by hundreds of health, education,
civil rights and religious organizations such as the Mental
Health Liaison Group (a coalition of over 50 national mental
health advocacy groups), the American Association of School
Administrators, the National Parent-Teacher Association (PTA),
the Association of Professional Chaplains, and the NAACP. The
Presbyterian Washington Office has also shown support for this
legislation and is committed to seeing that people's whole health
needs are met. With better care for people with mental illness,
God's vision of health and wholeness for all people may become
more of a reality.
General Assembly
The 213th General Assembly (2001) approved overture 01-16 "On
Advocating Passage of Legislation Requiring Health Insurance
Plans to Provide Mental Health Benefits in Full Parity with
Medical and Surgical Benefits" from the Presbytery of Pittsburgh.
As noted in the overture rationale, "Jesus calls us to
ministries of healing and comfort with the outcasts of society.
The more than 35 million people in the United States who suffer
from serious mental illnesses too often receive inadequate health
care and are socially isolated and outcast because of the stigma
attached to these illnesses." Further, "Insurance
parity marks a commitment to effective treatment for the mentally
ill and to ending insurance discrimination against the mentally
ill" (Minutes, 2001, p.419).
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