Only a handful of states release for public consumption all data on the
growing amount of mental health spending and services provided through their
Medicaid programs, according to one of the first systematic surveys of all
state programs.
The survey of state Medicaid agencies, undertaken by the Substance Abuse
and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) and released last November,
is among the first to examine differences in how these agencies administer
mental health services.
The report comes as federal health officials have begun to propose broad
cost-cutting measures for Medicaid—some of which could be implemented
administratively, without congressional approval. The report's findings about
state Medicaid agencies' approaches to mental health care could have an impact
on those federal cost-cutting moves, according to mental health advocates.
The survey report is based on hour-long telephone interviews with state
Medicaid directors or their designees conducted over a seven-month period in
all 50 states and the District of Columbia.
Among the many organizational differences that the survey identified across
state Medicaid agencies, the one that mental health advocates were
particularly concerned with is the finding that only eight states publicly
release all reports on the extent and costs of their mental health programs
under Medicaid.
"One issue that has concerned us is the lack of data on where the
money is being spent and who is being treated," said Mary Giliberti,
director of public policy and advocacy at the National Alliance on Mental
Illness (NAMI), in an interview with Psychiatric News. "NAMI
wants more transparency."
Such information is needed not only by program administrators to make good
policy decisions, she said, but also by other stakeholders—such as
researchers, advocates, and the public—who help form those policies.
The survey reported that seven of the 48 states that generate reports on
the extent and costs of their mental health programs under Medicaid restrict
them to internal use. However, 22 states have a mix of publicly available and
internal-only reports. Among the 29 states in which some or all of the mental
health service reports are available only internally, there are 26 in which
the Medicaid agency shares the report with other state agencies.
Slightly more than half of the states reported that their Medicaid and
mental health agencies frequently collaborate on external meetings, public
reports, or presentations to the legislature. Nine other states reported that
the agencies collaborate "somewhat regularly" on such information
releases.
The findings on state Medicaid administration of mental health benefits are
increasingly important because the state agencies have taken on a growing role
over the last 30 years in funding, managing, and monitoring public mental
health services in the states.
Medicaid's share of total national mental health spending—both public
and private—rose from 16 percent in 1986 to 26 percent in 2003,
according to a study published in the August 1, 2007, issue of Psychiatric
Services. Non-Medicaid state mental health spending dropped from 27
percent of total national mental health spending in 1991 to 23 percent in
2001, according to the SAMHSA report. Medicaid's share of total state mental
health spending is projected to rise from more than half to as much as
two-thirds by 2017.
"The shift toward greater Medicaid funding of mental health
services," the authors stated in the report's executive summary,"
has resulted in part from the movement of mental health services from
institutional settings, where Medicaid funding is limited, to community
settings, where it is more readily available." The change also reflects
efforts by states to obtain federal Medicaid funding for services that
previously were funded entirely by state or local governments.
William Emmet, director of the Campaign for Mental Health Reform—to
which APA belongs—said in an interview with Psychiatric News
that the survey highlights the mixed blessing that comes with the states'
increased reliance on federal funding for their mental health services. The
federal approach creates some uniform standards to which all of the programs
must adhere, but those standards stem from a system that was not designed for
mental health care.
The report "points out the need for state mental health and other
state health officials to work closely together because many of them
understand the need for mental health services that may not be understood by
CMS [the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services]," Emmet said.
The survey report comes as CMS officials have begun broad cost-cutting
reviews and issuing new regulations to control rising costs in Medicare and
Medicaid. Mental health advocates said the survey results can inform CMS about
the different approaches the states have taken in their provision of mental
health care.
Another survey finding was that while state Medicaid agencies retain
ultimate authority over all aspects of their programs, some states have
delegated responsibility for some activities to other state agencies or to
private contractors.
"As a result of this flexibility, the administration of Medicaid
mental health services varies considerably across states," according to
the report.
Among those differences are whether state Medicaid and mental health
agencies are within the same umbrella agency. They are united in 28
states—usually under health and human services—and separate in 22
states and the District of Columbia.
Medicaid and mental health agency collaboration tends to be highest in
states where both agencies are in the same umbrella agency and lowest where
they are in separate agencies and where the mental health agency has authority
to set some Medicaid rates, according to the report.
Selby Jacobs, M.D., chair of APA's Committee on Public Funding for
Psychiatric Services, told Psychiatric News that state Medicaid and
mental health agencies should communicate and collaborate, but decision-making
authority is a key issue.
"Having both Medicaid and [mental health] agencies under an umbrella
agency seems to have advantages for integration of the two," he
said.
The authors' attempt to pull together information from each state to find
commonalities and differences among these state government entities was a
difficult task but an important achievement for mental health advocates,
according to Anita Everett, M.D., section director of Community and General
Psychiatry at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.
"A community psychiatrist or psychiatrist advocate could take this
document and learn a great deal about the functioning of these critical
government agencies within her or his own state by pulling information from
the charts in this report," said Everett, who has studied mental health
policy at the federal and state level.
"Administration of Mental Health Services by Medicaid
Agencies" is posted at<http://mentalhealth.samhsa.gov/publications/allpubs/SMA07-4301/>.▪