Hillary Clinton's Comprehensive Mental Health Policy Agenda
Today
Hillary Clinton announced her comprehensive plan to support Americans
living with mental health problems and illnesses. Recognizing that
nearly a fifth of all adults in the United States — more than 40 million
people — are coping with a mental health problem, Hillary’s plan will
integrate our mental and physical health care systems. Her goal is that
within her time in office, Americans will no longer separate mental
health from physical health when it comes to access to care or quality
of treatment. Hillary has been talking about mental health policy
throughout her campaign, since hearing directly from American parents,
students, veterans, nurses, and police officers about how these
challenges keep them up at night.
Hillary will convene a White
House Conference on Mental Health during her first year as President. In
addition, her comprehensive agenda on mental health will:
- Integrate
our nation’s mental and physical health care systems so that health
care delivery focuses on the “whole person,” and significantly enhance
community-based treatment opportunities.Hillary’s plan will foster
integration between the medical and behavioral health care systems
(including mental health and addiction services), so that high-quality
treatment for behavioral health is widely available in general health
care settings. Hillary will expand reimbursement structures in Medicare and Medicaid for collaborative care by tasking the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation to create and implement new such payment models.
- Promote early diagnosis and intervention, including launching a national initiative for suicide prevention.
The overall rate of suicide increased by 24 percent between 1999 and
2014, and is now at its highest level in 30 years. Hillary will direct
all relevant federal agencies, including Health and Human Services,
Veterans Affairs, and the Department of Education, to research and
develop plans for suicide prevention in their respective settings, and create a cross-government initiative headed by the Surgeon General
to coordinate these efforts. She also believes we must redouble our
efforts around early screening and intervention – and that means
training pediatricians, teachers, school counselors, and other service
providers throughout the public health system, to identify mental health
problems at an early age and recommend appropriate support.
- Enforce mental health parity to the full extent of the law. The
Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008, which Hillary
co-sponsored, requires that mental health benefits under group health
plans be equal to benefits for other medical conditions, and the
Affordable Care Act requires insurance plans in the individual and small
group markets to offer mental health coverage as an essential health
benefit. But while the right laws are on the books, they are too often
ignored or not enforced. As part of her commitment to fully enforcing
the mental health parity law, Hillary will launch randomized audits to detect parity violations, and increase federal enforcement. She will also enforce disclosure requirements so that insurers cannot conceal their practices for denying mental health care and strengthen federal monitoring of health insurer compliance with network adequacy requirements.
- Improve
criminal justice outcomes by training law enforcement officers in
crisis intervention, and prioritizing treatment over jail for low-level
offenders. As many as 1 in every 10 police encounters may be with
individuals with some type of mental health problem, and our county
jails today house more individuals with mental illness than our state
and local psychiatric hospitals. She will dedicate new resources to help train law enforcement officers in responding to conflicts involving persons with mental illness, and increase grant funding to support law enforcement partnerships with mental health professionals. She will alsoincrease investments in local programs
such as specialized courts, drug courts, and veterans’ treatment
courts, which send people to treatment and rehab instead of the criminal
justice system, and direct the Attorney General to issue guidance to federal prosecutors,
instructing them to prioritize treatment over incarceration for
low-level, non-violent offenders. Finally, she will work to strengthen
mental health services for incarcerated individuals and ensure
continuity of care so that they get the treatment they need, which will
improve outcomes for them after they reenter society and will reduce
recidivism.
- Improve access to housing and job opportunities. As
president, Hillary will expand community-based housing opportunities
for individuals with mental illness and other disabilities. Hillary will
launch a joint initiative between the Departments of Housing and
Urban Development (HUD) and HHS to create supportive housing
opportunities for thousands of people with mental illnesses and
disabilities, who currently reside in or are at risk of entering
institutional settings. The employment rate for people with serious
mental illness is below 20 percent, even though many of these adults
want to work and more than half could succeed with appropriate job
supports. Hillary will work with private employers and state and local
mental health authorities to share best practices around hiring and
retaining individuals with mental health problems, and in adopting
supported employment programs. She’ll also expand HHS’s “Transforming Lives Through Supported Employment” program, which already assists states and communities in providing supported jobs to people with mental illness.
- Invest in brain and behavioral research and developing safe and effective treatments. Hillary
believes we need a pioneering, multi-sector effort to transform our
knowledge of this field—from mapping the human brain to generating new
insights into what drives our behavior to investing in clinical and
services research to understand the interventions that work best and how
to deliver them to patients. As president, Hillary willsignificantly increase research into brain and behavioral science research. She
will provide new funding for the National Institutes of Health; build
on cross-collaborative basic research efforts like the BRAIN initiative;
scale up critical investments in clinical, behavioral, and services
research; and integrate research portfolios with pioneering work on
conditions like PTSD and traumatic brain injury already underway at DoD,
the VA, and HHS. She will develop new links with the private and non-profit sectors
to ensure that federal government efforts are aligned with those of
other sectors to ensure that progress occurs as quickly as possible. She
will also commit to brain and behavioral science research based on open data.
The full comprehensive proposal is available on HillaryClinton.com here >>>>