Mental health parity bill passed
Tuesday, June 1, 1999 | 7:26 a.m.
CARSON CITY - Insurers have to cover such some mental illnesses under a bill passed on the last day of the session.
The bill requires insurers to cover schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, major depressive, panic and obsessive-compulsive disorders. Those illnesses have high success rates with new medicines, said Assemblywoman Sheila Leslie, D-Reno, who co-sponsored the bill with Sen. Randolph Townsend, R-Reno.
"For Nevada to do something progressive on a social issue, well, it feels great to be one of the first 25 states, instead of the last 10 states with this policy," she said.
Copayments and deductibles paid for mental health-related services could be not greater than 150 percent of the out-of-pocket expenses for other medical benefits under the plan.
The bill doesn't apply to businesses with less than 25 employees. Insurers will be exempt, if they can prove to the insurance commissioner that mental health coverage would raise premiums by more than 2 percent.
Leslie says the provision is fine. She says studies show that full mental health parity increases costs by less than 1 percent.
The measure was the third attempt by Townsend to pass a mental health parity act this session. His first bill was killed by a 9-9 vote in the Senate. The second attempt was an amendment to another bill, which Gov. Kenny Guinn refused to sign.
SB557 is a compromise between the insurance industry, which says mandating coverage will drive prices up and cause businesses to cancel policies, and mental health advocates, who say mental illness is a biological disorder and should be covered by medical insurance.
The agreement was assisted by Guinn, who wanted to make sure any required coverage didn't place an undue burden on small businesses.
The measure passed the Senate late Sunday on a 15-3 vote. It won unanimous Assembly approval early Monday.
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