May 20, 2008--The following urgent action alert comes from the Health Policy Committee of the Mental Health Liaison Group, co-chaired by Laurel Stine of the Bazelon Center and Peter Newbould of the American Psychological Association.
Targets: All Members of the House of Representatives and Senate.
Action: Use the toll-free Parity Hotline, 1-866-parity4 (1-866-727-4894), to call your U.S. Representative and Senators. (The Parity Hotline reaches the Capitol switchboard, which can connect callers to their members of Congress).
Message: “I am calling to ask that the Representative/Senator urge the Leadership to help conclude negotiations on a mental health parity bill that can pass in both houses and become law this year. Relief from health benefit discrimination against mental and substance use disorders must wait no longer.”
Background: With suicide claiming some 30,000 lives each year in this country, health-benefit barriers still block millions of Americans from getting needed mental health and substance-use treatment. Given the critical need for Congress to lift those discriminatory barriers and a limited number of legislative days to do so, there is profound urgency to forging a compromise on mental health parity legislation that will not only yield strong protections but can pass both chambers. We applaud initial steps to reach that compromise, and call on Senate and House leaders to move quickly to ensure enactment of a strong mental health parity law this year.
We have been pushing hard since 2001 to enact full mental health parity, and victory is finally within reach.Following the Senate’s historic passage of S. 558 by unanimous consent in September and House passage of H.R. 1424 on March 5, informal negotiations commenced. Parity supporters across America should contact their Representative and Senators NOW to urge support for successfully concluding this process. Senate and House leaders should continue to work together to reconcile differences between the versions and produce a bill that can pass in both chambers.
Failure to pass a parity bill in 2008 would further delay relief for millions of American families who now face discrimination. It would also place the issue directly in the path of a health care policy tornado in 2009 -- health care reform – with no assurance that our issue would receive the attention it needs.
The Legislation: Both S. 558 and H.R. 1424 expand the Mental Health Parity Act of 1996 by prohibiting group health plans from imposing treatment or financial limitations on mental health benefits that are different from those applied to medical/surgical services. The legislation applies only to group health plans already providing mental health benefits and exempts plans sponsored by small businesses of 50 and under employees.
Resources: Fact sheets on parity and rosters of organizations supporting the House and Senate bills may be found at http://www.mhlg.org/page18.html.
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