Except for Dr. Quinn, the authors are with the Institute for Behavioral Health, Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts. Dr. Quinn is with the Department of Community Health Sciences, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Psychiatr Serv. 2018 Mar 1;69(3):315-321. doi: 10.1176/appi.ps.201700098. Epub 2017 Dec 15.
The 2008 federal parity law and the 2010 Affordable Care Act (ACA) sought to expand access to behavioral health services. There was concern that health plans might discourage enrollment by individuals with behavioral health conditions who tend to be higher cost. This study compared behavioral health benefits available in the group insurance market (nonmarketplace) to those sold through the ACA marketplaces to check for evidence of less generous behavioral health coverage in marketplace plans.
Data were from a 2014 nationally representative survey of commercial health plans regarding behavioral health services (80% response rate). The sample included the most common silver marketplace product and, as a comparison, the most common nonmarketplace product of the same type (for example, health maintenance organization or preferred provider organization) from each health plan (N=106 marketplace and nonmarketplace pairs, or 212 products).
Marketplace and nonmarketplace products were similar in terms of coverage, prior authorization, and continuing review requirements. Marketplace products were more likely to employ narrow and tiered behavioral health provider networks. Narrow and tiered networks were more common in state than in federal marketplaces.
Provider network design is a tool that health plans may use to control cost and possibly discourage enrollment by high-cost users, including those with behavioral health conditions. The ACA was successful in ensuring robust behavioral health coverage in marketplace plans. As the marketplaces evolve or are replaced, these data provide an important baseline to which future systems can be compared.
2008 年联邦平等法案和 2010 年平价医疗法案(ACA)旨在扩大获得行为健康服务的机会。有人担心,健康计划可能会通过那些往往成本更高的有行为健康问题的个人来阻止参保。本研究比较了团体医疗保险市场(非市场)和 ACA 市场提供的行为健康福利,以检查市场计划中行为健康覆盖范围是否不够慷慨。
数据来自 2014 年一项针对商业健康计划行为健康服务的全国代表性调查(80%的回复率)。样本包括最常见的银级市场产品,以及作为比较,来自每个健康计划的同类型最常见的非市场产品(例如,健康维护组织或首选提供者组织)(N=106 个市场和非市场产品对,或 212 个产品)。
在覆盖范围、事先授权和持续审查要求方面,市场和非市场产品相似。市场产品更有可能采用狭窄和分层的行为健康提供者网络。狭窄和分层的网络在州级市场比在联邦级市场更为常见。
提供者网络设计是健康计划可能用来控制成本并可能阻止高成本用户(包括有行为健康问题的用户)参保的一种工具。ACA 成功地确保了市场计划中强大的行为健康覆盖范围。随着市场的发展或被取代,这些数据为未来的系统提供了一个重要的基准进行比较。