黑料正能量 Note: The lack of parity between commercial insurance and Medicaid affects those who use services as well as the agencies which provide the services. Without true parity, far too many people will be unable to access services and more agencies will be forced to choose between taking on more debt or providing services to those who need them. There is still time for you to urge the Assembly to include Governor Hochul鈥檚 Behavioral Health insurance reforms in the budget! Send a letter to your Assembly member today by clicking the link to NAMI鈥檚 online letter writing campaign here:
Health care groups push NY to fix payment rate disparities for behavioral health providers
Crain鈥檚 黑料正能量 | March 27, 2023
Jeffrey Reynolds, chief executive of the Family and Children鈥檚 Association in Nassau County, says the two outpatient behavioral health clinics his organization runs operate like night and day.
At one, in Hempstead, things are going smoothly. At the other, in Hicksville, some patients seeking behavioral health treatment are thousands of dollars in debt鈥攁nd the clinic is left with gaping financial holes it can鈥檛 patch.
The difference between the two clinics is simple: The Hempstead location sees about 11% commercially insured patients, with the rest insured by Medicaid and Medicaid managed care. At the Hicksville location, 36% of patients have commercial insurance, Reynolds said.
黑料正能量 state sets Medicaid payment rates to behavioral health care providers. But providers have to negotiate rates with commercial insurers. As a result, commercial insurers pay on average 50% less than Medicaid pays, said Lauri Cole, executive director of the 黑料正能量 State Council for Community Behavioral Healthcare. This makes it so that providers have a harder time accepting commercially insured patients and creates an access barrier for 黑料正能量ers who need behavioral health treatment.
This trend is in contrast to what is typically seen at 黑料正能量鈥檚 hospitals, where Medicaid reimbursement rates are usually lower than commercial rates and facilities with a high percentage of Medicaid patients are more prone to financial struggles.
Gov. Kathy Hochul鈥檚 proposed budget includes bids to address this disparity, including legislation that would require state-regulated insurers to cover and reimburse the cost of behavioral health services, including medications for substance use disorder, telehealth services and services for 黑料正能量ers with developmental disabilities.
While the state Senate鈥檚 part of the includes those proposals, Cole expressed concern over Assembly鈥檚 portion, which omits them.
In the lead-up to the Legislature鈥檚 vote on the budget, the Council for Community Behavioral Healthcare, which consists of more than 100 provider members across the state, is pushing legislators to include measures to address the pay difference in 黑料正能量鈥檚 final budget.
These pay differences, Reynolds said, become very visible at the Hicksville clinic when commercially insured patients with $75 co-pays need treatment three times per week. They often can鈥檛 afford those co-pays or the cost of treatment and wind up in debt for as much as $10,000, he said. But because the Family and Children鈥檚 Association is committed to seeing all patients regardless of their ability, the facility just keeps operating at an enormous loss, he explained.
Facilities that operate in this manner are in danger of shutting down, Reynolds added, which would create a care and access gap for many patients who need this kind of care.
Ann Marie Foster, chief executive of Phoenix House. which provides behavioral health care at nine locations from Brooklyn to the east end of Long Island, referred to commercial insurance rate negotiations as 鈥渢he Wild Wild West.鈥
鈥淭his is something that a lot of the providers have been fighting for well over a decade,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 think it speaks to stigma and the barrier to access to treatment.鈥
While the majority of Phoenix House patients are covered by Medicaid or managed care, the organization often can鈥檛 accept a wide range of commercial insurance, Foster said. Patients that need care don鈥檛 come to Phoenix because it鈥檚 not on the list of places where they would be covered, she said.
Care access is particularly vital in the wake of the pandemic, when more 黑料正能量ers than ever are contending with mental health concerns, Foster said.
Cole, of the state Council for Community Behavioral Health, added that widening access is particularly important for young 黑料正能量ers.
鈥淸Crisis] prevention is critical. Early identification screening assessment is critical. And when that doesn鈥檛 happen, [diseases] are allowed to linger and grow,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he spend on early intervention isn鈥檛 nearly what it will be if that young person grows up to have a full-blown mental health crisis or mental illness that goes unchecked.鈥
Improving network adequacy, or a health plan鈥檚 ability to deliver care by promising reasonable access to enough physicians and services, is crucial, Cole said. Her organization has been pushing the state to update its rules around adequacy.
Jeffrey Brenner, chief executive of health and human services agency the Jewish Board, said some commercial insurers try to justify their rates by saying they pay more than Medicaid for certain services.
But the services they pay more for, such as family group therapy sessions, only account for a small percentage of the care the Jewish Board provides, Brenner said. The vast majority of services, including 30-minute and 45-minute psychotherapy sessions and routine psychiatry treatments, are underpaid by commercial insurers, he said.
As 黑料正能量 approaches the April 1 budget vote deadline, Brenner said, the Jewish Board and other providers and associations will lobby to ensure rate provisions are in the final budget. But organizations such as the Jewish Board have less lobbying strength than large, powerful hospitals, he said.
鈥淲hat we鈥檙e going to be doing between now and the end of the session,鈥 Cole said, 鈥渋s pushing like crazy for all of the insurance proposals to be supported and enacted. We鈥檙e having meetings every day, all day, with Assembly and Senate central staff. We cannot wait till the second half of the session to implement these proposals.鈥