Mental health care legislation introduced in the House on
Wednesday, March 7, takes a different course than a bill approved last month by
a Senate panel, potentially setting the stage for a battle between the two
congressional branches.
Like the bill approved by the Senate Health,
Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, the House measure, introduced by Reps.
Patrick Kennedy, D-Rhode Island, and Jim Ramstad, R-Minnesota, would require
group health care plans to provide the same cost-sharing requirements for mental
health care services as they do for other medical conditions.
The
measure, like the Senate bill, would exempt small employers from the parity
requirement, as well as employers whose health care costs rose—as a result of
upgrading their coverage of mental health expenses—by more than 2 percent during
the first plan year after enactment of the legislation or more than 1 percent in
succeeding years.
But the House measure is different in at least two
significant ways. While the Senate bill would pre-empt state laws mandating
cost-sharing and treatment parity for mental health care services, the House
bill would allow states to set stronger standards.
Additionally, while
the Senate bill would leave it to employers to decide which mental disorders
they will cover, the House bill mandates that employer plans would have to
provide coverage for the same range of mental disorders and illnesses that are
covered by federal health care plans available to members of
Congress.
Business groups endorsing the Senate bill—its chief sponsors
are health committee Chairman Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Massachusetts, who is Rep.
Kennedy’s father, and Rep. Mike Enzi, R-Wyoming, the panel’s ranking minority
member—have warned that their support is contingent on no significant changes
being made to the Senate bill.
Filed by Jerry Geisel of Business Insurance, a sister publication
of Workforce Management. To comment,
e-mail editors@workforce.com.