Congress Takes Action on Mental-Health Parity Bill

A new law may soon guarantee better insurance coverage of mental health—if House and Senate can agree

By Nancy Shute

Posted: September 24, 2008

Families dealing with a loved one's mental health problem (that means just about every American family, since 1 in 4 people has a diagnosable mental disorder) got one step closer to getting help with the high cost of treatment, thanks to congressional action on a long-stalled mental health parity law.

It has been a long time coming. The bill, in the works for 10 years, is designed to eliminate loopholes in federal law that let insurers provide less coverage for mental illness than for physical illness. That has caused much misery for families as they struggle to pay out of pocket for treatments for depression, anxiety, eating disorders, and other often chronic mental problems.

The deal isn't yet done because House and Senate are quibbling over a corporate tax break that is proposed to help offset anticipated costs of the parity bill. But if the bill wins final approval this week, here are four changes to look for soon:

mental health

Is this mental health parity act ever going to be law?

sharon hardin RN of PA @ Jun 29, 2009 20:32:24 PM

mental health

Is this mental health parity act ever going to be law?

sharon hardin RN of PA @ Jun 29, 2009 20:32:22 PM

FeNZmwUOYajvAH

lash extension

aaronhyl of DE @ Jan 10, 2009 16:59:34 PM

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