Prologue to article: Mental health benefits in public and private insurance range from no coverage whatsoever to a wide range of defined benefits. In addition, what insurance is available for mental health care often contains incentives for the wrong kinds of treatment or fails to provide adequate protection. In this essay the authors propose a “model” mental health benefit for the private insurance market that addresses these concerns. This model was developed in response to a congressional request to the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH). Early presentations of the model to NIMH , insurers, and patient groups have sparked much controversy. One goal of the model benefit is to draw national attention to the need to include mental health cure in serious proposals for national health reform. A bill introduced 12 May 1992 by Sen. Pete V. Domenici (RNM) and Sen. John C. Danforth (R-MO) describes a model mental health plan to be included in any national health care reform. While the plan in this bill is not the model mental health benefit described here, “it adopts a set of principles that are consistent with what we’ve set out,” said author Richard Frank. (Fall 1992)
Health Affairs
1992
Richard G. Frank, Howard H. Goldman and Thomas G. McGuire
http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/11/3/98.long