For Immediate Release: March 17, 2005
Contact: Linda Rosenberg, 917-359-1860;
OR
Bill Emmet, 401-578-1529; OR
Chris Burley, 202-467-5730 x 133
House Medicaid Cuts Devastating for Americans with Mental Illnesses,
Say Advocates
House Budget Resolution Draws Sharp Criticism
Washington, DC—The House of Representatives today passed
a federal budget resolution that advocates say would dramatically reduce federal
support for
Medicaid-financed mental health services.
“Indiscriminate Medicaid cuts could have a crippling effect at the local
level and absolutely devastate the tens of thousands of people with mental illnesses
and their families who rely on Medicaid to access needed services,” Linda
Rosenberg, spokeswoman for the Campaign for Mental Health Reform and President
and CEO of the National Council for Community Behavioral Healthcare.
Medicaid is the single largest source of financing for mental health care
and provides over half of state and local spending on mental health services.
However, even with current federal support for Medicaid, one of every two Americans
who need mental health treatment do not receive it, and the rate is even lower —and
the quality of care poorer—for ethnic and racial minorities, according
to the President’s Commission on Mental Health.
Without access to needed services, adults and children with mental illnesses
face increased risk of school failure, unemployment, substance abuse, homelessness,
arrest, incarceration, increased reliance on emergency facilities, and suicide. "Investing
in services that enable individuals to improve and become or remain productive
citizens saves resources in the long-term," said Bill Emmet, Director
of the Campaign for Mental Health Reform.
“Congress should be mending the delicate safety net for Americans who
have mental illnesses,” said Rosenberg. “Instead, lawmakers have
put forth a budget resolution that cuts crucial spending on health care for
some of America’s poorest and most marginalized citizens.”
The House-approved budget resolution provides no specific proposals on how
Medicaid cuts can be achieved. However, advocates believe that House and Senate
appropriators will likely seek guidance from President Bush’s budget,
which calls for cuts in a critical set of services for people with mental illness.
The budget resolution, which passed the House on a vote of 218-214 calls for
roughly $20 billion in Medicaid cuts and an estimated $106 billion in tax cuts
over the next five years. The Senate earlier today passed an amendment to strip
about $15 billion in Medicaid cuts from its version of the budget resolution.
“Unfortunately, Medicaid is fast becoming Capitol Hill’s favorite
political piñata,” said Rosenberg. “We urge Congress to
take a deliberate, careful approach to changes in such an important program.”
“The key to saving tax dollars is improving outcomes for people with
mental illnesses,” said Rosenberg. “In the long run, increasing
the number of Americans who recover from mental illness and increasing their
opportunities to lead successful lives in the community is the best way to
save money in Medicaid and other federal programs that serve people with mental
illnesses.”
# # #
The Campaign for Mental Health Reform has been organized as the mental
health community’s united voice on federal policy. Its goal
is to make access, recovery, and quality in mental health services the hallmarks
of our nation’s mental health system. Its members include organizations
representing millions of people with mental or emotional disorders and their
families and service providers, administrators and other advocates.
Campaign for Mental Health Reform: American Psychiatric Association
* American Psychological Association * CHADD - Children and Adults with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity
Disorder * Consumer Organizing and Networking Technical Assistance Center (CONTAC)
* Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance (DBSA) * Federation of Families for
Children's Mental Health (FFCMH) * International Association of Psychosocial
Rehabilitation Services (IAPSRS) * Judge David L. Bazelon Center for Mental
Health Law * National Alliance for the Mentally Ill (NAMI) * National Association
of County Behavioral Health Directors (NACBHD) * National Association of State
Mental Health Program Directors (NASMHPD) * National Council for Community
Behavioral Healthcare (NCCBH) * National Empowerment Center (NEC) * National
Mental Health Association (NMHA) * National Mental Health Consumers' Self-Help
Clearinghouse * Suicide Prevention Action Network USA (SPANUSA)
Steering Committee: Robert Bernstein, Ph.D., Bazelon Center
for Mental Health Law * Robert W. Glover, Ph.D., National Association of State
Mental Health Program Directors * Michael Faenza, MSSW, National Mental Health
Association * Michael Fitzpatrick, MSW, NAMI National Alliance for the Mentally
Ill
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