Workforce Expansion: Growing the workforce for youth peer support is another way to intervene earlier and provide the help and services that young people request. Several bills in Congress would support youth peer programs, including greater research investments, funding for school peer programs, and resources to expand youth peer program workforce development programs at the Health Resources and Services Administration.
For adults, bipartisan, bicameral legislation (H.R. 6748 and S. 3498) would allow health and mental health centers to bill Medicare for peer support services. The addition of peers will improve engagement and coordination with other care providers and ensure that services are tailored to an individual’s goals.
Payment Incentives and Transparency: Finally, federal policy needs to reconsider current fiscal incentives and improve transparency. For example, individuals seeking care often encounter what are referred to as “ghost networks” (provider lists containing numerous inactive listings) and have a very difficult time finding in-network providers. Bipartisan legislation (H.R.7708 and S. 3430) would require greater transparency in Medicare Advantage networks and data on these provider networks should be part of the bonus system to fiscally incentivize and improve access to in-network care.
In addition, Congress should address problematic insurance practices that drive up the cost of care and out-of-network bills, such as step therapy (H.R. 2630 and S. 652) and prior authorization requirements. Rates need to be re-examined, especially for integrated behavioral health care to incentivize primary care practices for adults (H.R. 5819 and S.1378) and children to meet more of the nation’s needs for behavioral health care.
While the current state of mental health in America may be dim, these bipartisan proposals provide reason for hope. With coordinated and persistent commitment, we can intervene earlier, develop the provider workforce, and adequately incentivize an effective system of care.
Schroeder Stribling is the President and CEO of Mental Health America, the nation’s leading community-based nonprofit dedicated to addressing the needs of those living with mental illness and promoting the overall mental health of all. She is a lifelong social justice advocate with over 20 years of experience managing organizations focused on mental health, homelessness, poverty, and racial justice.
The Ripon Forum is published six times a year by The Ripon Society, a public policy organization that was founded in 1962 and takes its name from the town where the Republican Party was born in 1854 –Ripon, Wisconsin. One of the main goals of The Ripon Society is to promote the ideas and principles that have made America great and contributed to the GOP’s success. These ideas include keeping our nation secure, keeping taxes low and having a federal government that is smaller, smarter and more accountable to the people.
SOURCE: https://riponsociety.org/article/state-of-mental-health-in-america/