npj Mental Health Research (Jun 2024)

Advancing mental health parity to ensure children’s access to care

  • Nathaniel Z. Counts,
  • Ashwin Vasan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s44184-024-00070-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
pp. 1 – 4

Abstract

Read online

Mental health and substance use parity provides a rhetorical device and policy strategy for achieving more equitable financing of mental health and substance use services, which the U.S. has pursued as a lead policy approach for improving access to mental healthcare. Parity implementation in the U.S. has improved access to care for children, but implementation challenges remain, leading to persistent treatment gaps and disparities, workforce shortages, and variable care quality. In the U.S., a recent policy change required health insurers to make available all of the data on their coverage and reimbursement practices for all health conditions. This new data enables a more detailed conceptualization of what parity means in children’s mental health and how it should be implemented and overseen. Researchers, clinicians, and advocates across the globe can use this data to build the case and the policy approach for parity, supporting more equitable financing of children’s mental health and substance use care and promoting families’ access to evidence-based care.