Ga. legislators plan push to insure mental health on par with physical coverage [View all]
A little-known federal law passed when President George W. Bush occupied the White House requires insurers to give behavioral health care equal footing with medical benefits.
That means, if a persons co-pay is $10 to have chest pains checked out by a medical doctor, then an insurer that offers mental health coverage cannot charge a higher co-pay for the same person to see a behavioral health specialist about anxiety or depression. The law applies to both mental health and substance use disorder treatment.
But advocates question whether that nearly 14-year-old federal law the enforcement of which is partly left to the states is being enforced in Georgia. A coalition of advocacy groups has pegged ramping up enforcement of the law in Georgia as its top priority this year.
We have no idea if the state is following federal law, Abdul Henderson, executive director of Mental Health America of Georgia, recently told a group of lawmakers. Georgia has not done anything to determine if group health plans and insurers in the state are following the law. I have a saying regarding parity, and it goes, In states where there is no enforcement, you will find non-compliance.
Read more: https://georgiarecorder.com/2022/01/05/ga-legislators-plan-push-to-insure-mental-health-on-par-with-physical-coverage/