Federal Spending On Behavioral Health Accelerated During Recession As Individuals Lost Employer Insurance
- 1 May 2013
- journal article
- Published by Health Affairs (Project Hope) in Health Affairs
- Vol. 32 (5) , 952-962
- https://doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2012.1065
Abstract
The 2007–09 recession had a dramatic effect on behavioral health spending, with the effect most prominent for private, state, and local payers. During the recession behavioral health spending increased at a 4.6 percent average annual rate, down from 6.1 percent in 2004–07. Average annual growth in private behavioral health spending during the recession slowed to 2.7 percent from 7.2 percent in 2004–07. State and local behavioral health spending showed negative average annual growth, −1.2 percent, during the recession, compared with 3.7 percent increases in 2004–07. In contrast, federal behavioral health spending growth accelerated to 11.1 percent during the recession, up from 7.2 percent in 2004–07. These behavioral health spending trends were driven largely by increased federal spending in Medicaid, declining private insurance enrollment, and severe state budget constraints. An increased federal Medicaid match reduced the state share of Medicaid spending, which prevented more drastic cuts in state-funded behavioral health programs during the recession. Federal Medicaid served as a critical safety net for people with behavioral health treatment needs during the recession.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- National Health Spending In 2011: Overall Growth Remains Low, But Some Payers And Services Show Signs Of AccelerationHealth Affairs, 2013
- Spending trends on substance abuse treatment under private employer-sponsored insurance, 2001–2009Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 2012
- The Great Recession, somatic symptomatology and alcohol use and abuseAddictive Behaviors, 2012
- Type of health insurance and the substance abuse treatment gapJournal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 2012
- An Analysis of the Slowdown in Growth of Spending for Psychiatric Drugs, 1986–2008Psychiatric Services, 2012
- Economic Grand Rounds: State Budget Cuts, Health Care Reform, and a Crisis in Rural Community Mental Health AgenciesPsychiatric Services, 2011
- Changes In US Spending On Mental Health And Substance Abuse Treatment, 1986–2005, And Implications For PolicyHealth Affairs, 2011
- Recession Contributes To Slowest Annual Rate Of Increase In Health Spending In Five DecadesHealth Affairs, 2011
- Hospital Psychiatry For The Twenty-First CenturyHealth Affairs, 2009
- The Decline In Receipt Of Substance Abuse Treatment By The Privately Insured, 1992–2001Health Affairs, 2004