The Mercury News

Kaiser mental health workers threaten strike

Union says overworked clinicians, understaff­ing drive open-ended action

- By Jocelyn Weiner

A union representi­ng 2,000 Kaiser Northern California mental health workers has announced plans for an openended strike beginning Aug. 15.

Among the reasons union representa­tives outlined: high clinician workloads and patients waiting weeks or even months for mental health care. Even as demand for care has surged, frustrated therapists are abandoning the health giant, said union representa­tive Matt Artz.

“We don't take striking lightly,” Sal Rosselli, president of the National Union of Healthcare Workers, which represents the clinicians, said in a prepared statement, “but it's time to take a stand and make Kaiser spend some of its billions on mental health care.”

CalMatters has reached out to Kaiser for comment. In the past, the health plan has pointed to a shortage of clinicians as an ongoing challenge.

The company has drawn increased scrutiny from lawmakers for its mental health services in recent years. In May, the Department of Managed Health Care announced that it would be conducting a non-routine audit of Kaiser's mental health services.

The union and Kaiser have one more bargaining session planned for Friday, Artz said. He said Kaiser Northern California's mental health workers, including psychologi­sts, social workers, therapists and addiction counselors, have gone on strike for short amounts of times six times in the past four years. This would be their first open-ended strike, which means the union is not establishi­ng an end date.

Kaiser has 4.6 million enrollees in Northern California, Artz said, though that figure does not reflect how many currently access their mental health benefits.

In a letter sent Sunday to the Department of Managed Health Care, which regulates health plans, the union asked the department to ensure that Kaiser continues providing mental health care to patients during the strike, rather than canceling appointmen­ts.

Amanda Levy, deputy director for health policy and stakeholde­r relations for the Department of Managed Health Care, said the department is monitor

ing access to services for patients impacted by the strike.

“The law requires health plans provide enrollees with medically necessary care within timely access and clinical standards at all times, which includes during an employee strike,” she said.

Kaiser mental health practition­ers say they still struggle to provide adequate and timely care for patients.

Sarah Soroken, who has worked as a therapist at Kaiser Fairfield for six years, said access to treatment has worsened during her time there. She said the pandemic has aggravated the situation, with more patients seeking care, even as more therapists are leaving.

“Right now we're at a crisis point,” she said. “Things are worse than ever.”

Kaiser is not the only provider facing a shortage of mental health practition­ers. Complaints of shortages also have been raised by counties, school districts and nonprofit organizati­ons around the state. Artz said some Kaiser providers are being recruited to work at telehealth start-ups, where money is good and workfrom-home options abound. Others are entering private practice.

The union says the rate at which mental health clinicians are leaving Kaiser nearly doubled in the past year, with 668 clinicians leaving between June 2021 and May 2022, compared with 335 clinicians the previous year. In a union survey of 200 of those departing clinicians, 85 percent said they were leaving because their workload was unsustaina­ble or they felt they did not have enough time to complete the work, and 76 percent said they were unable to “treat patients in line with standards of care and medical necessity.”

State Sen. Scott Wiener D-San Francisco, authored SB 221, which took effect July 1 and is intended to ensure patients don't face long delays for follow-up treatment through commercial providers such as Kaiser. The new law, which was sponsored by the union, requires that patients receive follow-up mental health care within 10 business days unless a provider determines that a longer wait will not be detrimenta­l to the patient.

At a virtual press conference in late June, Kaiser mental health practition­ers said the health giant wasn't close to meeting those requiremen­ts.

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