IOM Says Cost Should Trump Comprehensiveness in New Insurance Plans
The Institute of Medicine (IOM) is urging the government in a report released Thursday to consider cost as a key factor when it determines what an essential health benefit package looks like in insurance plans offered under the new health reform law. In the report, "Essential Health Benefits: Balancing Coverage and Cost," the IOM offers seven criteria for determining a benefit package. It says in the aggregate a benefit package must: be affordable; maximize the number of people with insurance; protect the most vulnerable; encourage better care practices; advance stewardship of resources; address the medical concerns of greatest importance; and protect against the greatest financial risks. A danger of this approach is that benefits packages could be modeled on those offered by smaller employers, who often provide more limited mental health coverage than large companies do.APA has a guide to key aspects of the health reform law titled "Health Care Reform: A Primer for Psychiatrists," which is posted at www.appi.org/SiteCollectionDocuments/Journals/PSY/HealthCareReform.pdf. Read more about how the reform law is changing psychiatric practice in Psychiatric News at http://pn.psychiatryonline.org/content/46/6/9.2.full.(Image: Gina Sanders/Shutterstock.com)