Colorado Insurance Companies Fail to Provide Equal Access to Mental Health Care

New study finds behavioral health coverage across insurance companies – both in Colorado and throughout the country – is more limited than physical health coverage. Reimbursement rates for behavioral health have fallen dramatically behind primary care, forcing individuals to seek services out-of-network at higher costs.

Denver, December 4, 2019 — In the midst of an opioid epidemic and alarming suicide rates, Coloradans are finding it increasingly difficult to access affordable behavioral health care under their private insurance plans. A groundbreaking nationwide study by Milliman, an international actuarial firm — documented widening disparities in access to in-network services for mental health and substance use disorder treatment among 37 million employees and their families – shedding new light on this disturbing trend over a five-year period beginning in 2013.

Read the Full Press Release

Posted in ,

Can Accountable Care Organizations Improve the Value of Health Care by Solving the Cost and Quality Quanderies?

Kelly Devers and Robert Berenson of the Urban Institute have completed a policy brief supported by the…

Read More

MINDS ON THE EDGE: Facing Mental Illness

"MINDS ON THE EDGE: Facing Mental Illness Produced by the Fred Friendly Seminars for broadcast on PBS…

Read More

The Journey of Asian Adoption: Building a Multicultural Family

     The Asian Pacific Development Center is excited to announce their outreach effort to the adoption community by hosting a Western…

Read More

Resource Center for Primary Care and Behavioral Health Collaboration Now Available Online

The National Council for Community Behavioral Health recently introduced an online Resource Center for Primary Care and Behavioral…

Read More