Today’s post is by Linda Rosenberg, who has recently joined HMA as a Senior Advisor. In this blog she offers her perspective on parity rules for behavioral health from her many years of experience in the field, most recently as the President and CEO of the National Council for Mental Wellbeing until her retirement in 2019 and as part-time faculty member at the Columbia University Department of Psychiatry.
Attending the 2024 Alignment for Progress conference and experiencing the collective commitment to the 90/90/90 goals, I was once again struck by the groundbreaking nature of the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008. The legislation was the critical step in ensuring mental health and substance use is treated on equal footing with physical health. Patrick Kennedy, both as the driver of the Act and in his ongoing advocacy helped us to reshape national conversations and policies.
The new regulations released by the Biden administration add much-needed teeth to the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act. The regulations take on one of the biggest ongoing challenges: the lack of adequate provider networks. Behavioral health clinicians are far harder to find in-network compared to medical providers, with many leaving networks due to low reimbursement rates. Under the new regulations, insurers must maintain adequate networks, regardless of the challenges, which will likely come with significant costs to entice clinicians back.
Implementation of the regulations won’t be simple. The insurance industry is sorting out what compliance will mean to their operations and bottom line. The federal government is struggling to fund and build a monitoring infrastructure. State governments need to understand their roles and responsibilities. And patients and the people who love them need to learn about their expanded rights and how to exercise those rights. Everyone has a job to do.
The intent of the parity law was about ensuring that mental health and addiction services are treated with the same urgency, seriousness, and respect as any other form of medical treatment. And yet parity has remained a promise unfulfilled for too many. The new regulations are a welcome and necessary step forward, but they cannot address all that needs to be done. Parity is essential, but it’s not enough.
Early on in my tenure and long before I retired from the National Council for Mental Wellbeing, a very special member and mentor Carl Clark MD, CEO of WellPower in Denver shared a secret with me. There are “wicked” problems, and wicked problems don’t have a single solution. A wicked problem is complex and interconnected … and has no stopping rule, rather wicked problems are opportunities for progress.
For too long I’ve listened to too many talks and read too many reports about “fixing” or “creating” a behavioral health system, but the reality is far more complex, far more “wicked”. Fragmentation is endemic to all of healthcare in the USA, we have no single healthcare system and no unified behavioral health system either. We have thousands of systems—public, private, nonprofit, hospital-based, and government-run – each serving different populations and communities with varying levels of resources and approaches and each dependent on a bottom line.
The fight for parity was never just about changing laws—it’s about changing hearts, minds, and systems, reshaping the way we understand and deliver care across all these thousands of systems we’ve created and continue to create.
Well intentioned programs with layered initiatives focused on whole health, social determinants of health, and other efforts are adding complexity to a system that’s already overwhelming for the very people these systems are supposed to serve.
What we need is a financing model that ties all the pieces together – Certified Community Behavioral Health Centers (CCBHCs) are a promising start – a financing model that pays for the continuum of services, inpatient and community, rather than the current fragmented approach that pays for pieces separately. At the same time, we need to leverage technology to alleviate pain points, establish desperately needed standards of care, and provide decision support for both clinicians and patients. With technology, we can measure and benchmark care across systems, creating transparency and accountability at every level.
By aligning financing with the full spectrum of services and using technology to drive transparency and accountability, we can finally begin to address the wicked problems that prevent effective mental health and addiction care. As I help non-profits, health technology companies, and venture firms build growth strategies that result in consumer and economic benefits, I understand that the new regulations give us a foundation to build on—the rest is up to us.