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Special Report
Preventive Interventions
Under Managed Care: Mental Health
and Substance Abuse Services


Appendix A: Preventive Behavioral Health, Past and Present

How widespread, severe, and costly are mental disorders and substance abuse problems? Consider the following:

  • One-third of American adults may develop a diagnosable mental disorder in their lifetimes, and one adult in five is thought to have a mental disorder at any given time (Robins & Regier, 1991).
  • An estimated 12% of all children and adolescents in this country have one or more mental disorders (Pelosi, 1996).
  • Depression is the fourth leading cause of illness-related disability in the world (NIMH, 1998).
  • Of the 10 major causes of disability worldwide, half are mental disorders and substance abuse problems (Mrazek, 1998).
  • In 1996, the cost to the nation of providing treatment for mental disorders and the abuse of alcohol and other drugs was $79.3 billion.

An analysis of "actual" causes of death in the United States concluded that in 1990, tobacco was first (400,000, or 19% of deaths); alcohol was third (100,000, or 5% of deaths); and illicit use of drugs was ninth (20,000, or 1% of deaths). The authors pointed out that health resources were being allocated based on conditions that are recorded on death certificates rather than these preventable causes of mortality, estimating the national investment in prevention at less than 5% of total annual health care expenditures (McGinnis & Foege, 1993).

NIMH has traced the prevention of mental disorders to the 1930s, noting that early efforts were based on humanitarian concerns rather than a foundation of research. Starting in the late 1960s, increased emphasis was placed on the importance of creating and building a knowledge base (NIMH, 1998).

Preventive services have been a component of managed care for many years. In 1982, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services published Guidelines for Health Promotion and Education Services in HMOs, which updated a 1976 document entitled Planning Health Education in HMOs. Noted the authors, "HMOs are a special form of health care delivery not only because of the cost savings they achieve but because of the opportunity they offer for provision of preventive and health education services" (Mullen & Zapka, 1982).

Unfortunately, behavioral health services in general have taken a back seat to primary medical care services in managed care contracts; preventive behavioral services benefits are not widely available. In recent years, capitation for behavioral health services has been decreasing, while restrictions on those services have been increasing (Mrazek & Haggerty, 1994). Data from 1997 indicate that at least 75% of employer-sponsored health plans restrict behavioral health coverage more than general medical coverage (Buck, Teich, Umland, & Stein, 1999).

Increasingly, managed care enrollees are receiving behavioral health services from managed behavioral health care organizations (MBHOs), which "carve out" behavioral health care services from other medical care services and deliver them to a defined population. Private-sector employers and public-sector institutions such as Medicaid and State mental health and substance abuse agencies negotiate these arrangements to control costs and to improve quality and access for mental health and substance abuse care (Edmunds et al., 1997). Other models for managed mental health and substance abuse care include the following: integrated with other health services within a single managed care company; left out of MCO coverage entirely; and modified integrated or "partially carved out" so that enrollees receive some acute behavioral services from the physical health plan but receive referrals to a specialty provider when more intensive intervention is indicated (Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, 1998b).

A recent survey of HMOs by Conwal, Inc., regarding its health promotion activities found that managed health care relationships with prevention took many forms: (1) prevention subcontracts from the MCO to community resources; (2) prevention carve-outs in which the MCO is required to support a designated specialty prevention provider; (3) community patronage in which prevention is provided as a "philanthropic commitment" (Stoil & Hill, 1998, p. 21); (4) a case referral model in which enrollees are referred to community resources without direct compensation; (5) strategic investment by the MCO as a long-term community or enrollee benefit; (6) a collaborative model in which the MCO and community-based organizations collaborate fully in the prevention arena; and (7) an integrated services model in which the MCO adopts community- based prevention as an integral component (Stoil & Hill, 1998).

Consumers, providers, insurers, and purchasers are all stakeholders in decisions about which services will be included in MCO contracts and how they will be delivered. Other stakeholders include constituency groups, accrediting organizations, government agencies, and business groups on health (Mrazek, 1998). Several compelling reasons motivate these stakeholders to support the incorporation of proven, effective preventive behavioral health programs and services into MCO systems of care:

  • It is in the public interest to prevent mental disorders and substance abuse rather than to wait until disease and disability impose their burdens.
  • A substantial and growing body of research provides evidence that certain preventive behavioral health interventions are efficacious (that is, they work under ideal conditions) and effective (that is, they work under "real world" circumstances).
  • A small but developing body of multidisciplinary research demonstrates that certain preventive behavioral health interventions can produce cost savings or a cost offset (that is, the cost of the interventions is off-set by savings from lower utilization of other services).
  • MCO accreditation standards include requirements for some preventive behavioral health interventions. These requirements may increase as the evidence base expands.

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