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Easiest path to mental health funding may be Medicaid expansion

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The combined effect of the Medicaid expansion and the health insurance exchanges will begin to reverse what has been a withering of public investment in mental health in the 21st century. Cuts began during the post-9/11 recession and accelerated during the recent economic downturn.

According to a study by Miller and others at NASMHPD, state investment in mental health services dropped by $4.35 billion between 2009 and 2012, even as an additional 1 million people sought treatment in publicly financed inpatient and out-patient behavioral treatment services during that same period.

In the report, Miller and his colleagues make the case that treating people for mental illness pays huge dividends. For example, they cite studies showing that diagnosis and treatment for depression has an economic return on investment of $7 for every $1 spent. Comprehensive community-based mental health services for the young can cut public hospital admissions and lengths of stay by about 40 percent. And those treated for depression, according to the studies, have experienced huge savings in their overall health care costs, even when they have had other ailments, such as cancer and heart disease.

Nevertheless, most states have followed the opposite path. According to the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI), California cut its mental health budget by $587.4 million between 2009 and 2011, New York by $132 million, and Illinois by $113.7 million. In those same years, Alaska slashed its mental health budget by 35 percent and South Carolina and Arizona by 23 percent each.

The result: “Waiting lists are longer,” says Mike Fitzpatrick, executive director of NAMI. “There are fewer beds, fewer case workers, fewer programs.”

That is why Fitzpatrick and other mental health advocates are pushing hard for all states to opt into the Medicaid expansion. “For people with mental illnesses, this could be a life-changer,” he says.

Colorado, scene of a mass killing at an Aurora movie theater in July, is one of the few states that plan to use state money to expand mental health services. Last month, Democratic Gov. John Hickenlooper proposed an $18.5 million plan to bolster the state’s mental health services. His proposal would create a single, statewide mental health crisis hot line, establish five around-the-clock mental health crisis centers, increase the number of state-supported psychiatric beds, and develop housing alternatives for those suffering from mental illness.

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