Excluding Institutions for Mental Diseases From Federal Reimbursementfor Services: Strategy or Tragedy?
- 1 November 2000
- journal article
- Published by American Psychiatric Association Publishing in Psychiatric Services
- Vol. 51 (11) , 1397-1403
- https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ps.51.11.1397
Abstract
A key component in the dehospitalization of persons with chronic mental illnesses and their translocation to a wide range of settings has been the shift from state to federal funding encouraged by the Social Security Administration's restrictions on funding for institutions for mental diseases (IMDs), usually referred to as the IMD exclusion. The overall effect of the exclusion, which limits federal funding for mentally ill patients receiving care in many settings, including state psychiatric hospitals, has been to create incentives for states to move patients out of state hospitals, which has contributed to homelessness and inappropriate incarceration. The author traces the background and development of the IMD exclusion, starting with the federal government's actions in the 1840s ensuring that the states, not the federal government, would continue to fund care for their seriously mentally ill citizens. He also analyzes Congress' many missed opportunities to pass legislation that would have modified, or perhaps even made moot, the IMD exclusion, including the Clinton administration's efforts at health reform, the quest for parity of insurance coverage for mental illnesses, and the initiation of public-sector managed care. The consequences of the continuation of the IMD exclusion are explored, and the intended fiscal consequences are contrasted with the unintended clinical outcomes.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mental health services of the future: Managed care, unmanaged care, mismanaged careSmith College Studies in Social Work, 1996
- Serving the seriously mentally ill in the “least restrictive alternative”: Issues from a federal court consent decreeAdministration and Policy in Mental Health and Mental Health Services Research, 1995
- The linear continuum of transitional residences: debunking the mythAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1993
- Defining the Meaning of "in the Community"Psychiatric Services, 1991
- The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Program on Chronic Mental Illness: An OverviewPsychiatric Services, 1990
- Form and Function of Mental Health Authorities at RWJ Foundation Program Sites: Preliminary ObservationsPsychiatric Services, 1990
- Second-generation deinstitutionalization, II: The impact of Brewster v. Dukakis on correlates of community and hospital utilizationAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1990
- The Need for Asylum for the Chronically Mentally IllSchizophrenia Bulletin, 1986
- Historical origins of deinstitutionalizationNew Directions for Mental Health Services, 1983
- The uninstitutionalized generation: A new breed of psychiatric patientNew Directions for Mental Health Services, 1982