Every American deserves access to mental health and substance use disorder treatment as an important part of their overall health and well-being. Access to mental health care can help people manage and cope with mental health concerns, reducing the impact of these conditions on their daily lives. This can improve their ability to function in their work, relationships, and community, leading to a better quality of life.
Integrating mental health into other care settings is an important way to increase access for patients. The Collaborative Care Model (CoCM) is one best-practice approach for integrating care for whole-person health. This evidence-based model of integrated mental health care enhances primary care by adding two key components – care management and psychiatric consultation.
Collaborative care services are delivered by a team of experts made up of the treating practitioner (typically a primary care provider but may another specialty), a behavioral health manager, and a psychiatric consultant.
Original Medicare reimburses for care delivered through the CoCM and many commercial payers. ÐÜèÊÓƵ half of state Medicaid programs also support behavioral health integration (BHI) through the CoCM codes and through other approaches, including reimbursement for general BHI care management services.
Despite widespread agreement that BHI is critical to effective, whole-person care, uptake of collaborative care among clinicians has been relatively slow. To get to the bottom of this, ÐÜèÊÓƵlooked at commercial claims (which includes employer-provided coverage and the individual market) data for 2018 and 2021 to see if any trends emerged in use of and payment for the collaborative care and behavioral health codes.