Volume 48 | Number 5 | October 2013

Abstract List

K. John McConnell Ph.D.


Objective

To determine whether comprehensive behavioral health parity leads to changes in expenditures for individuals with severe mental illness (), who are likely to be in greatest need for services that could be outside of health plans' traditional limitations on behavioral health care.


Data Sources/Study Setting

We studied the effects of a comprehensive parity law enacted by regon in 2007. Using claims data, we compared expenditures for individuals in four regon commercial plans from 2005 through 2008 to a group of commercially insured individuals in regon who were exempt from parity.


Study Design

We used difference‐in‐differences and difference‐in‐difference‐in‐differences analyses to estimate changes in spending, and quantile regression methods to assess changes in the distribution of expenditures associated with parity.


Principal Findings

Among 2,195 individuals with , parity was associated with increased expenditures for behavioral health services of $333 (95 percent $67, $615), without corresponding increases in out‐of‐pocket spending. The increase in expenditures was primarily attributable to shifts in the right tail of the distribution.


Conclusions

Oregon's parity law led to higher average expenditures for individuals with . Parity may allow individuals with high mental health needs to receive services that may have been limited without parity regulations.