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Federal Legislation To
Provide Full Insurance Coverage For Severe Mental Illnesses NAMI
Pledges Full Support to Senators Domenici and Wellstone, Hails
Landmark Measure as Victory for Millions of Americans
Contact: Mary Rappaport
703-312-7886
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For Immediate Release 14 Apr
99 |
ARLINGTON, VA - U.S. Senators Pete Domenici (R-NM) and
Paul Wellstone (D-MN) today introduced legislation that will end
harmful and discriminatory health insurance coverage for adults and
children with the most severe mental illnesses.
"This historic legislation recognizes and accepts severe mental
illnesses as the real medical conditions they are," said Laurie
Flynn, executive director of the National Alliance for the Mentally
Ill (NAMI). "Families across the United States will no longer have
to struggle to receive the life-saving treatments that are vital to
recovery."
The Mental Health Equitable Treatment Act of 1999 would require
full insurance parity for the most severe, biologically based mental
illnesses by prohibiting unequal restrictions on annual and lifetime
mental health benefits, inpatient hospital days and outpatient
visits, and out-of-pocket expenses.
Under the Domenici-Wellstone measure, full insurance parity would
be provided for schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, major depression,
obsessive-compulsive and panic disorders, posttraumatic stress
disorder, autism, and other severe and disabling mental disorders,
such as anorexia nervosa and attention-deficit/hyperactivity
disorder. Insurers would be required to fully reimburse services for
these disorders at the same level set for the treatment of other
physical conditions.
The proposal would also prohibit limits on the number of
inpatient days and outpatient visits for mental health treatment in
general.
"Senators Domenici and Wellstone refuse to leave behind those who
have been stranded by the double standard held against so many with
these debilitating brain disorders," said Flynn. "We applaud their
courage and commitment to finishing the important work they began
more than two years ago."
The new legislation builds on the two lawmakers' groundbreaking,
but limited, Mental Health Parity Act of 1996, which required only
that annual and lifetime benefits for mental illnesses be equal to
those offered for other physical disorders. Currently, health plans
can still discriminate by limiting hospital days and outpatient
visits, severely affecting the ability of individuals with the most
serious and chronic mental illnesses to receive needed medical care.
Although business interests strenuously objected to the earlier
law, actual experience is showing that health insurance parity is
affordable and cost effective. The latest federal report on the
costs of health insurance for mental illnesses, issued in July 1998
by the National Advisory Mental Health Council, concludes that full
parity increases total healthcare costs less than one percent a year
under managed care. The study also finds that plans implementing
parity in conjunction with managed care could actually reduce costs
substantially - by as much as 30 percent to 50 percent.
The new measure, which would apply only to group health plans
that already provide mental health benefits, would exempt small
businesses with 25 or fewer employees and eliminate the September
31, 2001 sunset provision in the Mental Health Parity Act of 1996.
Recent data from the World Bank and the World Health Organization
show that four severe mental illnesses covered by the
Domenici-Wellstone legislation - schizophrenia, bipolar disorder,
major depression, and obsessive-compulsive disorder - account for
four of the top ten most disabling illnesses in the United States
and in the world.
"By standing up for those most hurt by insurance discrimination -
individuals with disabling mental illnesses - ," said Flynn,
"Senators Domenici and Wellstone are saying that it's not acceptable
to sentence people with these disorders to half lives of inadequate
medical treatment, social isolation, unemployment, criminalization,
homelessness, and for far too many, premature death."
"This legislation also follows science, which shows that severe
mental illnesses are real, identifiable, and treatable. By
supporting this critical measure, Congress will greatly reduce the
tremendous burden and cost that is incurred to the individual, the
family and to society when treatment is denied."
NAMI has more than 1,200 state
and local affiliates
in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico,
American Samoa, and Canada. |
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