Addiction Treatment Industry Newswire |
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At a mental health conference sponsored and backed by former First Lady Rosalynn Carter, HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius will today unveil the new detailed rules governing access to residential and outpatient care by people with private health insurance. These rules have been awaited eagerly, and increasingly impatiently, by the addictions industry since the Wellstone Parity Act was passed in 2008 five long years ago. And mental health and addictions patient advocates are still saying that the release of today’s parity regulations from HHS is a “starting point” and much remains to be Still a State-by-State Ballgame And primary enforcement of the new parity rules is going to be placed in the hands of state insurance commissioners, who are currently overwhelmed with the technical intricacies of ObamaCare. State insurance commissioners also come from a wide variety of political backgrounds and belief systems, which means some commissioners may be inclined to play ball in strictly enforcing parity while others may be less so inclined and still others may be inclined to be downright obstructionist. Likely Not an Addictions Residential Panacea Because the sudden fast-tracking and increased profile of parity is being driven by the politics and media frenzy surrounding recent senseless gun massacres, the overwhelming focus is on the seriously mentally ill and, thus, on psychiatrics as opposed to addictions. And while the two are becoming increasingly integrated through dual diagnosis, the new regulations should not be seen as a panacea and a massive new opportunity for addictions providers on the residential side. Insurance companies are in no mood to suddenly open the residential cash spigots and will likely still have significant means and opportunity to push back when it comes to prior authorization, reimbursement, level of care decisions and stay lengths. POST YOUR COMMENTS BELOW… start a debate! Got Addiction News? …TELL US! |