Boca Benefits Consulting Group Inc.

A Blog for HR and Benefits Professionals

Archive for the ‘Mental Health’ tag

May is Disability Insurance Awareness & Mental Health Month

with one comment

 Twitter Logo

Guardian Life Insurance Comipany of America is donating $1 to Mental Health America for every “depresssion knowledge” survey completed during May 2010 Mental Health Month.  A few minutes of your time will support a worthwhile cause. 

Please click here to access survey.

Bookmark and Share
[Note: to share only this single post, click title of this post above prior to clicking on Share icon.]

Mental Health Parity & Addiction Equity Act of 2008

with 2 comments

[Below Excepted from Recent Carrier Communication]

 

On October 3, 2008, President Bush signed into law H.R. 1424 – an economic stabilization, energy, and tax extenders package – that included the Paul Wellstone and Pete Domenici Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008.

The new law amends the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), the Public Health Service Act (PHSA), and the Internal Revenue Code (IRC) to prohibit group health plans that provide mental health or substance use disorder benefits from establishing more restrictive financial requirements (e.g., deductibles and co-payments) or treatment limitations (day/visit limits) for mental health or substance use disorder services than those established for medical and surgical benefits.

The legislation does not require group health plans to offer mental health or substance use disorder benefits. Rather, it establishes parity requirements between medical/surgical benefits and mental health or substance use disorder benefits for group health plans that provide mental health or substance use disorder benefits.

Scope:  Applies to group health plans that provide both medical/surgical benefits and mental health or substance use disorder benefits. Small employers (50 or fewer employees) are exempt from the requirements in this law.

Parity Requirements: Requires parity with respect to both treatment limitations and financial requirements.

  • General requirements. Prohibits plans from applying specific financial requirements or treatment limitations to mental health or substance use disorder benefits that are more restrictive than the predominant (most common or frequent) financial requirements or treatment limitations applied to substantially all medical and surgical benefits. Prohibits separate cost-sharing requirements or treatment limitations applicable only to mental health or substance use disorder benefits.
  • Financial requirements are defined to include deductibles, copayments, coinsurance or limits on out-of-pocket expenses.  Current federal parity requirements for annual and lifetime limits for mental health services continue to apply.
  • Treatment limitations include limits on frequency of treatment, number of visits, days of coverage, or other similar limit on the scope or duration of treatment. 

Definition of Mental Health Benefits: Provides for mental health benefits and substance use disorder benefits to be defined under the terms of the plan and in accordance with applicable state and federal law. 

Medical Management: Plans may be able to utilize medical management practices since the bill states that nothing shall be construed as affecting the terms and conditions of the plan or coverage to the extent that the plan terms and conditions do not conflict with the new parity requirements, but the bill does not specify if medical management practices may vary between medical and surgical benefits and mental health and substance use disorder benefits.  Plans are required to disclose the criteria used for medical necessity determinations, upon request.  The law also requires plans to make available the reason for any denials of reimbursement for such services to participants or beneficiaries, upon request or as otherwise required.  

Out-of-Network Coverage: Plans are required to provide out-of-network coverage of mental health or substance use services in a manner consistent with the parity requirements, if out-of-network coverage is provided for medical and surgical benefits. It is expected that plans will be allowed to manage out-of-network mental health and substance use disorder benefits in a manner consistent with how in-network mental health and substance use disorder benefits may be managed, but the interpretation of this rule is not entirely clear and is likely to be subject to significant scrutiny during the rulemaking process.  

Cost Exemption: The bill includes a cost exemption for employers that experience an increase in claim costs of at least 2% in the first plan year and 1% in subsequent years.  The plan must be in place for the first 6 months of the plan year and the increased costs must be certified by a qualified actuary. 

Relation to State Laws:  Retains current law “HIPAA floor” standard, meaning that federal parity requirements are the “floor”, but state laws may apply to insured plans so long as they do not prevent the application of the federal law.   Florida’s current mental health and substance abuse treatment coverage laws are not as comprehensive as this federal law, so large group plans, whether fully-insured or self-funded, will be required to comply with the federal law. 

Effective date: Plan years beginning on or after one year from the date of enactment unless the plan is collectively bargained, then the effective date is the later of 1/1/09 or the termination date of the collective bargain agreement excluding any extensions.

 

Written by Bob Murphy

November 12th, 2008 at 1:11 pm