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Behavioral health and managed care contracting under SCHIP.

Abstract

This Policy Brief examines behavioral health managed care contracting under separately administered State Children's Health Insurance Programs (SCHIP), i.e., programs that operate under the direct authority of Title XXI of the Social Security Act rather than as expansions of Medicaid. Most separate SCHIP programs buy managed care style health insurance for some or most of their enrolled children. Because Title XXI provides states with far greater administrative flexibility than Medicaid with respect to coverage and benefit design, provision of services, and administration of managed care arrangements,studying separate SCHIP managed care products sheds important light on how states might approach insurance and managed care design generally in the area of behavioral health were Medicaid modified through section 1115 demonstration or federal statutory authority to permit greater latitude. To conduct this analysis, two nationwide databases maintained by the George Washington University Center for Health Services Research and Policy (CHSRP) were used: a database consisting of all Medicaid MCO-style managed care contracts in use in Calendar Year 2000; and a nationwide database consisting of contracts used by separate SCHIP programs for the same calendar year. As of the point of collection in 2000 there were 33 such separate programs; according to CMS' latest website information, that total has now reached 35. Both sets of contracts were analyzed and separated into their components by lawyers experienced in managed care contract analysis and interpretation. The data were entered into working tables that organize the contents of the contracts into a series of searchable domains.

Authors

No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

12542079

Citation

Rosenbaum, Sara, et al. "Behavioral Health and Managed Care Contracting Under SCHIP." Policy Brief (George Washington University. Center for Health Services Research and Policy), 2002, pp. 1-35.
Rosenbaum S, Sonosky C, Shaw K, et al. Behavioral health and managed care contracting under SCHIP. Policy Brief George Wash Univ Cent Health Serv Res Policy. 2002.
Rosenbaum, S., Sonosky, C., Shaw, K., & Mauery, D. R. (2002). Behavioral health and managed care contracting under SCHIP. Policy Brief (George Washington University. Center for Health Services Research and Policy), (5), 1-35.
Rosenbaum S, et al. Behavioral Health and Managed Care Contracting Under SCHIP. Policy Brief George Wash Univ Cent Health Serv Res Policy. 2002;(5)1-35. PubMed PMID: 12542079.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Behavioral health and managed care contracting under SCHIP. AU - Rosenbaum,Sara, AU - Sonosky,Colleen, AU - Shaw,Karen, AU - Mauery,D Richard, PY - 2003/1/25/pubmed PY - 2003/2/22/medline PY - 2003/1/25/entrez SP - 1 EP - 35 JF - Policy brief (George Washington University. Center for Health Services Research and Policy) JO - Policy Brief George Wash Univ Cent Health Serv Res Policy IS - 5 N2 - This Policy Brief examines behavioral health managed care contracting under separately administered State Children's Health Insurance Programs (SCHIP), i.e., programs that operate under the direct authority of Title XXI of the Social Security Act rather than as expansions of Medicaid. Most separate SCHIP programs buy managed care style health insurance for some or most of their enrolled children. Because Title XXI provides states with far greater administrative flexibility than Medicaid with respect to coverage and benefit design, provision of services, and administration of managed care arrangements,studying separate SCHIP managed care products sheds important light on how states might approach insurance and managed care design generally in the area of behavioral health were Medicaid modified through section 1115 demonstration or federal statutory authority to permit greater latitude. To conduct this analysis, two nationwide databases maintained by the George Washington University Center for Health Services Research and Policy (CHSRP) were used: a database consisting of all Medicaid MCO-style managed care contracts in use in Calendar Year 2000; and a nationwide database consisting of contracts used by separate SCHIP programs for the same calendar year. As of the point of collection in 2000 there were 33 such separate programs; according to CMS' latest website information, that total has now reached 35. Both sets of contracts were analyzed and separated into their components by lawyers experienced in managed care contract analysis and interpretation. The data were entered into working tables that organize the contents of the contracts into a series of searchable domains. UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/12542079/Behavioral_health_and_managed_care_contracting_under_SCHIP_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -