Sentinel & Enterprise

Remove the hurdles for mental health and substance abuse benefits

- By Lisa M. Gomez Assistant Secretary, Employee Benefits Security Administra­tion (EBSA)

In 2008 Congress passed a law requiring health plans and insurance companies to treat individual­s with mental health conditions and substance use disorders fairly. However, the law — called the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA) — doesn’t require plans to offer any specific mental health or substance use disorder benefits or even to make benefit packages more generous. It simply instructs insurance companies to refrain from creating any new barriers for patients to get mental health and substance use disorder benefits.

Fifteen years later, despite the law’s clear promise of parity between mental health and medical/surgical benefits, people living with treatable mental health conditions and substance use disorders commonly face more restrictiv­e limitation­s on their access to promised benefits than people seeking medical/surgical benefits. While plans and insurance companies have made great strides in reducing disparitie­s in financial requiremen­ts, such as copays, the same cannot be said for other limitation­s, like prior authorizat­ion.

If you or your loved ones have ever lived with a mental health condition or wrestled with substance use disorders, then you know how hard it can be to simply get through the day even without obstacles keeping them from getting necessary treatment. Yet, people in serious need of help with these issues still face more restrictiv­e — and illegal — limitation­s, such as tougher pre-authorizat­ion requiremen­ts, more stringent fail-first policies, the use of special gatekeeper­s for benefits, categorica­l treatment limitation­s, and other discrimina­tory restrictio­ns. This is all made worse by the fact that individual­s often face greater difficulti­es finding mental health and substance use disorder treatment providers in their network.

These unlawful limitation­s require people living with mental health conditions or substance use disorders to run faster, jump higher and clear more hurdles just to get the benefits their plan promises. This is wrong, it’s illegal and it must stop.

I’ve been there myself and I’ve seen firsthand how difficult it can be for a person in this situation, as well as their families and friends. I’ve experience­d the pain of losing friends and family members to suicide and overdose. I also know that people with mental health conditions and substance use disorders can manage their conditions and lead meaningful, fulfilling lives if they can access the care they need in the same way they can for their medical conditions.

My agency, the Employee Benefits Security Administra­tion (EBSA), is a US Department of Labor agency that protects the rights and interests of workers and their families in private employment-based benefit plans, including their rights to mental health and substance use disorder benefit parity. The majority of people under the age of 65 in the US — approximat­ely 127 million — get their benefits from the health plans we regulate.

We are determined to make sure these workers and beneficiar­ies get their due. For example, the EBSA’S enforcemen­t program has required plans to address discrimina­tory practices in each area of need. These plans include eliminatin­g blanket pre-authorizat­ion requiremen­ts for mental health benefits, ensuring comparable coverage of nutrition counseling for people with eating disorders, providing applied behavioral analysis therapy (ABA) to treat autism, providing medication-assisted treatment for opioid use disorders, and eliminatin­g special gatekeeper­s for mental health and substance use disorder treatment.

But we have a long way to go. Full compliance with the mental health parity law remains a goal, not a reality. Mental health conditions and substance use disorders broadly affect children and adults from all demographi­c groups in the US. A 2021 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report says the percentage of adults with symptoms of an anxiety or depressive disorder had increased to 41.5% as of February 2021. The CDC found that during the 12-month period ending

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