Legislature Passes Bill to Expand Mental Health Services

by Brian Wilson
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The Iowa legislature has sent the governor a bill to expand access to mental health treatment for people who do not need to be hospitalized but still need comprehensive in-person services. The bill gets rid of a state rule that insurance companies cited when limiting coverage for these services to just 10 days. House members voted to send the bill to the governor, but expressed frustration about senate changes to it that would let insurance companies and the private managers of Iowa’s Medicaid program keep requiring prior authorization for such care. Representative Gary Mohr of Bettendorf convened a day-long hearing to focus attention on the issue.

Mary Neubauer’s son Sergei took his own life in 2017, and she is among the advocates who’ve been pressing for changes. She says the longer patients wait for insurance authorization to get care during a mental health crisis, the harder it may be for that person to recover.

Representative Beth Wessel-Kroeschell of Ames says the Senate changes lean in favor of private insurers and the companies that manage care for Iowa Medicaid patients.

The bill calls for a bed tracking system at facilities in Iowa that provide intensive medical care for children in a residential setting. It also could expand mental health services at the state-run Mental Health Institute in Independence — but only if state officials could do so within the Institute’s current budget.

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