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costs of mental health parity


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Guest jamesfdavis

To comply with the Federal law and do no more, less than 1/2 of 1 percent of total medical plan cost.

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James,

Thank you for the response.

Now the "tough" question -

what are the cost increases if mental health benefits are required to have the same copays, reimbursements, limitations, etc. as other illnesses?

[one jurisdiction has mandated this extremely broad benefit.)

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Guest jamesfdavis

Larry,

I haven't played with that one lately, but let me try a couple of suggestions:

- If you have access to Tillinghast or a similar model, see what it produces.

- Also, get your client's MH utilizaiton from its carrier and play some what-if games with it. For example, if (1) current MH utilization is 10% of total claims, and (2) full parity increases MH claims by 30%, then total costs go up 3%. When you get the utilization data, have the carrier separate it by in-patient, out-patient and chemical dependency.

I notice from your profile that you're from LA. You might remember a contrary view to cost increases that came out of UCLA some months ago; namely, full MH parity was almost cost-neutral becsuse of savings in other areas and the elimination of MH claims masking as physical illnesses in current plans.

Jim

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