1 / 16

Mental Health

Mental Health. Econ 737.01 11/4/10. Outline. I. Introduction II. Imperfect information III. Externalities IV. Public provision of care V. Moral hazard VI. Adverse selection VII. Quality. I. Introduction. Broad category: mental health and substance abuse (MH/SA)

avon
Download Presentation

Mental Health

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Mental Health Econ 737.01 11/4/10

  2. Outline • I. Introduction • II. Imperfect information • III. Externalities • IV. Public provision of care • V. Moral hazard • VI. Adverse selection • VII. Quality

  3. I. Introduction • Broad category: mental health and substance abuse (MH/SA) • Mental illnesses range from relatively mild (mild depression, AD/HD) to severe and debilitating (schizophrenia, manic and major depression) • Often stigmatized, more than physical illness • Care provided by primary care physicians, psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, counselors, and nurses • Inpatient care provided in surgical section of general hospital, psychiatric unit of general hospital, private psychiatric hospital, and state mental hospital

  4. I. Introduction • Key statistics • Spending $75 billion (8.3% of health expenditures) in U.S. in 1995 • 30% of population estimated to experience diagnosable MH/SA illness during 12-month period • 4% of population suffer from the most major, and the bulk of costs are from this group • Indirect costs twice direct costs (Rice et al., 1990) • Employment, earnings, productivity, crime, accidents, child abuse and neglect, homelessness, divorce • Only 25% of those with MH/SA illness get treatment; 4.5% of those without one get treatment anyway

  5. I. Introduction • “Mental health economics is like health economics only more so” (Handbook, p. 895) • Even worse imperfect information • More obvious externalities associated with illness • Greater role of public sector, especially states • Greater moral hazard • Greater adverse selection • Greater quality concerns

  6. II. Imperfect information • Provider: Variation in diagnosis and treatment practices varies between locations even more than other types of care (Phelps, 2000), reflecting a lack of full information. • Patient: Mental illness often makes patients incapable of making appropriate treatment decisions

  7. III. Externalities • There are negative externalities associated with the direct costs and also many of the indirect costs associated with mental illness • Crime, accidents, child abuse and neglect, divorce • How much of the externality issue is real and how much is unjustified fear/stigma? • Provides justification for public care and involuntary institutionalization

  8. IV. Public provision of care • Similarly to many other developed countries, in the U.S. public mental health care is 1) prominent and 2) decentralized (run by the states). • Externalities • Inertia (state public mental health systems predate modern insurance arrangements)

  9. IV. Public provision of care

  10. IV. Public provision of care

  11. V. Moral Hazard • Moral hazard in health care: having health insurance causes you to overconsume care since you no longer face the full cost • Evidence suggests people more price sensitive with mental health care than other types of health care => moral hazard is worse • Why do you think this is?

  12. V. Moral Hazard • Responses • Deductibles and copayments • Mental health “carve outs”: purchasers (employers) contract out mental health benefits separately from other insurance benefits • This allows more stringent restriction of mental health services, typically through managed care • Treating mental and other health care differently is controversial.

  13. V. Moral Hazard

  14. VI. Adverse Selection • Adverse selection in health care: people more likely to get sick are the ones who will want health insurance • Adverse selection seems to be more severe with mental health care than other types of care. • Why do you think this is?

  15. VI. Adverse Selection • Responses • State mandates specifying coverage minimums (coinsurance, outpatient visits, hospital days, deductibles) • Coverage structured to attract healthier payments and deter sicker => too little care in some areas and too much in others

  16. VII. Quality • Concerns about quality of care are more pronounced with mental health care than other types of care. • Why? • Imperfect information • Social stigma • Financial incentives (i.e. different treatment by insurance) • Large role of public providers • Performance-based pay would be ideal but is difficult to implement

More Related