Are the mentally ill discriminated against by health insurers? In many states -- including Michigan - it is almost impossible for an employer to buy a benefit package through a Health Maintenance Organization that does not contain limits on the mental health service benefits. Since there are no similar limits on benefits for patients with long-term or chronic medical conditions, the discrimination claim is not unreasonable. The primary reason for this disparity in benefits is the belief of employers, as well as some HMOs, that lifting the annual cap on mental health benefits may cause the mentally ill to demand more services. The belief is that this would be expensive for the insurance companies and would ultimately result in increased empl...
This Article is the final installment in a three-part project that presents a comprehensive challeng...
Background: The 1990’s witnessed a new wave of state and federal legislation affecting mental health...
At least twenty-eight percent of American adults suffer from a mental or addictive disorder. However...
While stigma around mental health, as well as treatment options have been drastically improved withi...
Insurers in Wisconsin are not required to cover mental health services at the same level as physical...
Mental health parity laws require insurers to extend comparable benefits for mental and physical hea...
Recently, the Center for Health Services Research and Policy through a grant from the Substance Abus...
From 1997 to 2001, several state legislatures passed laws mandating that employers must offer mental...
Abstract only availableFaculty Mentor: Dr. David Webber, Political ScienceFor decades, health insura...
This paper examines the issue of mandating parity in coverage of mental health services in the conte...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the first paragraph of the paper. The issue of parity for mental he...
Mental health parity legislation has gone through a series of distinct iterations each resulting in ...
Background: The goal of the Paul Wellstone and Pete Domenici Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equi...
Discriminatory practices by the insurance industry, such as benefit limits (caps) on mental health s...
Background: In the United States, insurance benefits for treating alcohol, drug abuse and mental hea...
This Article is the final installment in a three-part project that presents a comprehensive challeng...
Background: The 1990’s witnessed a new wave of state and federal legislation affecting mental health...
At least twenty-eight percent of American adults suffer from a mental or addictive disorder. However...
While stigma around mental health, as well as treatment options have been drastically improved withi...
Insurers in Wisconsin are not required to cover mental health services at the same level as physical...
Mental health parity laws require insurers to extend comparable benefits for mental and physical hea...
Recently, the Center for Health Services Research and Policy through a grant from the Substance Abus...
From 1997 to 2001, several state legislatures passed laws mandating that employers must offer mental...
Abstract only availableFaculty Mentor: Dr. David Webber, Political ScienceFor decades, health insura...
This paper examines the issue of mandating parity in coverage of mental health services in the conte...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the first paragraph of the paper. The issue of parity for mental he...
Mental health parity legislation has gone through a series of distinct iterations each resulting in ...
Background: The goal of the Paul Wellstone and Pete Domenici Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equi...
Discriminatory practices by the insurance industry, such as benefit limits (caps) on mental health s...
Background: In the United States, insurance benefits for treating alcohol, drug abuse and mental hea...
This Article is the final installment in a three-part project that presents a comprehensive challeng...
Background: The 1990’s witnessed a new wave of state and federal legislation affecting mental health...
At least twenty-eight percent of American adults suffer from a mental or addictive disorder. However...