New law on mental health insurance lacks enforcement
A law the
House Bill 507, which takes effect in January, gives private health insurers 30 days to process credentialing applications, which mental health providers submit to join an insurer’s network. The bill, signed by Gov.
Currently, insurers operating managed care plans have 45 days to credential practitioners and add them to their network. Despite the law, this process can often take months, according to
Anew has a waitlist of more than 50 patients, and is in need of more mental health practitioners. When Anew’s location in
While patients have the option of paying out of pocket for their care, many cannot afford to, according to
“The faster this process goes, the faster [providers] are up and running and seeing people,” Pasquale said. “On a collective, community level, it’ll help us get people off of the waitlist.”
But although the law will create a tighter deadline, it doesn’t guarantee insurers will follow it.
The lack of stricter enforcement creates issues for mental health providers, according to Dr.
“Absent significant investment in credentialing workforce and process improvement to increase the efficiency of the credentialing process, it is unclear how the 30-day deadline will be met, especially given that the current system does not meet the 45 days timeline,” Asbury said via email.
The delays in the credentialing process increase administrative work and overall costs for providers, while also delaying needed care for clients, Asbury said. “Some of the insurances are extremely difficult to deal with.”
The new law comes as
“On one hand you have clients who are desperate for care, and you have providers who want to work,” Pratt said. “People can’t wait for three months for care. We are in constant need of new providers to address that backlog.”
This creates a challenge when a practice is trying to hire new providers, Pasquale said.
“It does make it hard when you’re onboarding folks, when they’re ready, they’re available, they want to see clients, but they are hampered by the red tape,” Pasquale said. “We want it to go as quickly as possible, and we want our applications to be as clean and complete as possible.”
And for clients on waitlists, timing is everything, Pasquale noted. “The longer care is delayed, ... the worse the problem becomes, and the harder to treat the problem becomes. Early intervention is always best.”
Bettencourt, the insurance department commissioner, touted the new law, saying via email it will recognize outpatient mental health providers as a vital part of health care.
“For them, time is money,” Bettencourt said. “Delays in credentialing mean lost revenue and, more critically, delayed care for patients or out-of-network bills they shouldn’t have to pay.”
Bettencourt characterized the law as “pro-provider, pro-patient, and pro-market,” and a “a model of common-sense reform.”
But Pratt, of
“We can’t just have them sitting around,” Pratt said, pointing to the disorganized nature of different insurance networks. “We need a national system. ... In the meantime, all that does is take insurance companies off the hook for payments.”
© 2025 The Keene Sentinel (Keene, N.H.). Visit www.sentinelsource.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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