Time is running out for major health care reform, but a rifle-shot bill that
would put mental health treatment on the same level as medical and surgical
benefits could move quickly in the Senate now that Congress has returned from
its August recess.
The momentum has been provided by an agreement just before the break between
Sens. Edward Kennedy, D-Massachusetts, and Pete Domenici, R-New Mexico, on
policy toward pre-emption of state mental health parity laws.
The
legislators, in concert with business, insurance and patient groups, decided
that the Senate bill would keep in place a law that allows states to regulate
insurance, and the federal government to regulate group health
plans.
This approach essentially would ensure a federal floor for
mental health benefits that could then be increased by individual states.
Although business lobbyists preferred previous language that would allow
federal law to prevail, they backed the change because it keeps the Senate bill
on track for passage.
“In a way, we authored this change,” says E. Neil Trautwein, vice president
and employee benefits counsel at the National Retail Federation. “It is a
standard we know and can live with.”
Both the Senate version and a similar House measure would require equity
between mental health and medical/surgical benefits on treatment limitations,
costs — such as deductibles and co-payments — and out-of-network coverage. Neither
mandates mental health coverage.
The House and Senate labor committees have both approved their respective
bills. Two more House committees must work on that chamber’s version. Each
measure has enough co-sponsors—268 in the House and 57 in the Senate—to ensure
floor passage.
Business groups oppose the House bill because it would require that mental
health plans cover all diseases included in the Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual-IV. Employers worry that they would have to cover substance disorders
like caffeine addiction. They also are concerned that the House bill would
curtail managed care.
Proponents assert that using the DSM would end discrimination by diagnosis
and dispute that the House bill would limit medical management. About 44 million
Americans suffer from mental illness, but only a third receive treatment.
Although the Senate and House approaches vary widely, advocates of the Senate
bill believe that a potentially difficult conference committee featuring two
Kennedy generations could be avoided. The House version was co-written by Rep.
Patrick Kennedy, D-Rhode Island.
“There is some hope that the House would adopt the Senate-passed bill and
then we can all enjoy a Rose Garden signing ceremony,” Trautwein says.
Such a celebration might be a harbinger for increased cooperation between
business and the Democratic majorities on Capitol Hill.
The participation of a wide range of interest groups in cobbling together the
Senate bill “allowed for the vetting of the concerns that all these stakeholders
brought to the table,” says Kathryn Wilber, health policy legal counsel at the
American Benefits Council.
The process might be viable in the future when Congress tackles larger health
care issues.
“This is a model that would work going down that road,” Wilber
says.
—Mark Schoeff Jr.