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- <text id=93TT1818>
- <title>
- May 31, 1993: What Price Mental Health?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 31, 1993 Dr. Death: Dr. Jack Kevorkian
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HEALTH CARE, Page 59
- What Price Mental Health?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>President Clinton aims to guarantee coverage to all Americans,
- but the cost could be astronomical
- </p>
- <p>By JANICE CASTRO--With reporting by Dick Thompson/Washington
- and James Willwerth/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> When Jennifer Wilbert of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, developed
- schizophrenia at 16, she began a distressing odyssey through
- the mental-health-care system. Overwhelmed by dangerous delusions,
- terror and frequent bouts of depression, she needed immediate
- hospitalization. That is when her parents, Rob and Joan, discovered
- that their insurance would pay for only 30 days of care. It
- was not enough. Jennifer, who is now 21, was hospitalized at
- first for four months. To care for her daughter with constant
- supervision at home, Joan Wilbert took a leave of absence from
- her job as a clerk at the state department of revenue and lost
- her seniority. Now the hospital is suing the family for $51,000,
- the cost of Jennifer's uninsured care. Says Rob, who is 57:
- "I had a heart attack at age 45. I was hospitalized for five
- weeks. Then I had rehabilitation. I saw the bills. They were
- outrageous. The treatment didn't cost us a cent. I think that
- anyone who has a brain disease should have the same coverage
- as someone who has heart disease."
- </p>
- <p> He is not alone. Comprehensive mental-health care is among
- the medical benefits that President Clinton is thinking about
- guaranteeing to all Americans. Its chief advocate: Tipper Gore,
- who heads the mental-health section of the White House task
- force. During a recent evening session in the Roosevelt Room,
- Clinton discussed the issue with Mrs. Gore, the Vice President,
- Health Secretary Donna Shalala and members of the mental-health
- working group. Joining the 90-minute briefing, Clinton questioned
- the advisers and listened closely as Mrs. Gore explained how
- many severely disabled Americans are going without help. "I
- know," said the President, telling the group that he had stopped
- to talk to mentally ill homeless people during his early morning
- jogs around the streets of Washington. Said Clinton: "We need
- to do something about it."
- </p>
- <p> Ensuring care for the severely disturbed, however, is only a
- small part of the new mental-health benefits under consideration
- at the White House. The President would meet little resistance
- in proposing such coverage. Only about 5 million Americans suffer
- from such conditions as severe depression and schizophrenia.
- But another 34 million people at any given time need treatment
- for lesser problems like moderate anxiety and depression. As
- he nears his deadline of mid-June for presenting his health-care
- reforms to Congress, Clinton is trying to decide whether to
- guarantee coverage of everything from hospitalization and psychotherapeutic
- drugs to open-ended talk therapy.
- </p>
- <p> The problem is the cost. Mental-health treatment accounted for
- 10% of all U.S. health spending, or $67 billion, in 1990. And
- yet only 1 in 5 victims of all types of mental disorders gets
- treatment. Extending broad coverage to all Americans could double
- the bill--and then some.
- </p>
- <p> Besides covering more people, the President must decide whether
- to go along with pleas from the mental-health lobby for "parity"
- with other medical coverage, which would mean at least an 80%
- reimbursement of all mental-health treatment. As the Wilberts
- learned painfully, many insurers now sharply limit access to
- mental-health care and reimburse only a fraction of the costs,
- usually a maximum of 50% after high deductibles. Providing such
- coverage for the severely disabled alone would cost Americans
- $6.5 billion more a year, according to the National Institute
- of Mental Health.
- </p>
- <p> One solution may be to offer different levels of coverage for
- conditions of varying severity. The White House task force's
- suggestions on how to do that have included limiting the number
- of talk-therapy sessions for moderately distressed patients,
- depending on the problem. But who will decide who qualifies
- for more help? The President may turn for guidance to a new
- definition of "serious mental illness" announced last week by
- the Center for Mental Health Services--but if he does, caution
- is advised. The Center's definition includes those who are so
- impaired by such symptoms as sleep disturbance, low energy and
- feelings of helplessness that they have trouble eating, bathing,
- dressing and managing money. Such patients may now get free
- or very cheap treatment at state and local clinics that receive
- federal funds. Many mental-health groups object to the definition,
- contending that it is too vague and would include many people
- who are not severely impaired, thus overtaxing the system and
- narrowing access to benefits for the truly needy.
- </p>
- <p> There is broad consensus among medical experts and business
- executives that mental-health coverage, accompanied by reasonable
- restraints, would practically pay for itself by curbing the
- indirect costs of mental illness. The National Institute of
- Mental Health estimates that lithium alone has saved the U.S.
- economy more than $40 billion since 1970 by stabilizing severely
- depressed Americans and making it possible for them to return
- to work. Reducing other harmful side effects of psychological
- disturbance would yield further savings. "One of the biggest
- causes of lost days at work is depression," says Mary Jane England,
- president of the Washington Business Group on Health. Those
- days cost employers an estimated $17 billion in 1989.
- </p>
- <p> Moreover, one of the largest hidden costs of mental illness
- is already in the U.S. health-care bill: because many sufferers
- are unaware that their condition is a psychiatric problem like
- depression or panic disorder, millions handle their problems
- only by going to the family doctor. Several studies have estimated
- that half of all general medical care is sought by people who
- have no identifiable physical illness but are plagued by psychological
- problems with such symptoms as anxiety, sleeplessness and lack
- of energy. If that is true, billions of dollars in primary care
- may be wasted by physicians studying the wrong part of the patient's
- body.
- </p>
- <p> The need for better mental-health coverage is clear enough,
- yet persuading Congress and the public to pay for dramatically
- expanding it will be difficult. No other area of medicine is
- so plagued by ignorance, suspicion and misunderstanding about
- its value. Unlike a purely physical ailment like a broken leg,
- it is difficult to tell when psychiatric problems have been
- fixed. In addition, psychoanalysts and other professionals often
- disagree on the best course of treatment, lending an aura of
- faddishness at times to therapy.
- </p>
- <p> Yet mental-health professionals see the Clinton reform effort
- as their main chance to achieve parity with their medical brethren.
- Says Frederick Goodwin, director of the National Institute of
- Mental Health: "If one is going to question the use of psychotherapy
- for the stress of going through a divorce, then one should also
- question physical therapy to rehabilitate a knee so a patient
- can return to skiing." Even so, Clinton's plan is likely to
- offer only half a loaf. As Tipper Gore told a Senate committee
- two weeks ago: "The final plan may not contain everything I
- would like it to. Anyone who is passionate about any aspect
- of health care must be prepared for that." Those words contain
- a good deal of political wisdom for shaping all the aspects
- of Clinton's health-reform plan.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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