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The Controversial Mental Health Parity Bill

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The Mental Health Parity Bill is a bill that was first passed by Congress as the Mental Health Parity Act in 1996 and was created to help give people who needed mental health care but did not have enough money to pay for such care get the attention they needed for their mental health issues. The Mental Health Parity Bill was recently passed and approved by a lower house committee this year and has since then gathered a lot of flack from the people who may need to shell out the money to cover the expenses that this bill will incur.

The Mental Health Parity Bill basically states that insurance companies and employers need to provide equal health care benefits for both physical as well as mental illnesses. This means that aside from physical health care, people who have insurance policies or are employed by certain companies are entitled to mental health care when they need it and the cost for such mental health care should be covered by the insurance company or the employer of the person suffering from the mental health issues they are going through.

The Mental Health Parity Bill is rather controversial since there are really no set boundaries that indicate the true extent of mental issues that may affect the people who claim that they need medical attention for mental health problems. The recently approved Mental Health Parity Bill is also very controversial since the original Mental Health Parity Act had exempted coverage by insurance companies and employers if the expenses incurred by a patient if the mental health problems were proven to have been the result of substance abuse or drug usage. The Mental Health Parity Bill supports that a person is entitled to the same kind of care that they might get if they had cancer or heart disease for problems that involve alcoholism or drug addictions.

The Mental Health Parity Bill is not a welcome development for employers and insurance companies alike since they believe that a lot of people will take advantage of this bill and seek treatment for the smallest possible mental health illness they may think they have. Employers also argue that this kind of a bill will be an added burden to their situation and will only be an additional expense on their part. The probability of this bill creating huge dents in the medical bills and insurance policy payments of companies is pretty real. However, the reason behind the creation and approval of such a bill is noble and admirable despite the lack of concrete guidelines to help keep this bill from being abused.

 

Mental Health News

Financial crisis has caused no surge at mental-health agencies (Deseret Morning News)

Area mental-health agencies and suicide lines have put staff members on alert for callers in emotional turmoil over the financial crisis, but so far there have been no noticeable upswings.

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Government gives no timelines for mental health law (Times of Malta)

According to Dolores Gauci, Richmond Foundation CEO, about 130,000 Maltese suffer from mental health problems. The government yesterday again pledged it would place the reform of the outdated Mental Health Act high on the national agenda but stopped short of giving specific timelines.

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WHO: Mental health stigma unfair (UPI)

GENEVA, Switzerland, Oct. 10 (UPI) -- People with mental health problems should no longer be denied treatment because of cultural stigmas, World Health Organization officials said in Switzerland.

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Bridging Gap Between Mental, Physical Health Care (NPR)

Provisions slipped into the economic bailout bill mandate that employers and insurance companies give mental health issues parity with physical health issues. Among the changes? Companies will not be able to charge different rates for mental — versus physical — health services.

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WHO seeks care for mental health victims in developing nations (People's Daily)

As the world marks the Mental Health Day, the World Health Organization (WHO) has said that millions of people with mental disorders in the developing world were not receiving necessary treatment and care, according to the News Agency of Nigeria on Friday. This were contained in a statement issued by the WHO in Abuja, the Nigerian capital city, stressing the need for urgently scaling up services ...

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Sen. Pete Domenici on Mental Health (Time Magazine)

The Senator from New Mexico talks about his career-long campaign for mental health parity, and the landmark legislation he's passed as part of the $700 billion Congressional bailout package

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