States Are Just Starting to Enforce the 2008 Mental Health Law
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In 2008,
Advocacy groups and researchers are also bringing greater attention to the issue. In an upcoming survey and report, the
To enforce the federal parity law, state insurance commissioners can fine, sue, de-certify plans or force insurers to review denied health claims. State attorneys general also have investigative resources and powers. Forty-eight states have their own mental health parity laws, though 19 of them are limited in scope and only a handful cover wide-ranging mental health and substance abuse issues like the federal law, according to
Citing both
[click_to_tweet]One quarter of state health exchange plans don't comply with federal mental health coverage requirements.[/click_to_tweet]
Schneiderman said he hopes his aggressive enforcement approach can serve as a model for other states. His office is not only seeking to find differences in coverage but also in deductibles and so-called "nonquantitative" differences, like how insurers are processing and denying claims. Some say
"Not many other AGs are looking to do something like this, for a lot of different reasons, not the least of which is they're very complicated cases," said
That elevates the importance of insurance commissioners to enforce parity, a task they've so far generally shied away from. That's in large part because the federal government didn't issue regulations for the 2008 parity law until years after it was passed, and even now, commissioners need more enforcement guidance so they feel comfortable acting, said
But the inactivity also reflects a longstanding perception that mental health benefits aren't as vital as physical health benefits, argues
Washington state Insurance Commissioner
What's also helpful, though, is judges taking strong stances in favor of state and federal parity laws, said
In the case of Hamburger's own state,
"We didn't need guidance from the state
In the short term,
"
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[email protected] -- @ckardish
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