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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Papen
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/12/2007
3/17/06 HB
SHORT TITLE Mental Health Insurance Coverage
SB 536/HFl#1
ANALYST Schuss/Baca
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
(Unknown)
(Unknown) Recurring
General
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Human Services Department (HSD)
Public Regulation Commission Insurance Division (PRC)
Department of Health (DOH)
New Mexico Health Policy Commission (NMHPC)
Public Education Department (PED)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SFl amendment #1
Senate Floor Amendment #1 makes eligible for coverage an individual who has a mental
diagnosis but hose health insurance does not include mental health services.
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 536 proposes to amend the eligibility provision of the Medical Insurance Pool Act,
Section 59A-54-12(3) NMSA 1978, to expand eligibility to include mental health services for
individuals who already have other health insurance coverage.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
According to PRC, SB 536 would most likely increase the number of persons eligible for
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Senate Bill 536/HFl#1 – Page
2
coverage under the pool and pool membership would increase. While individuals covered by the
pool do pay premiums for coverage, their premiums pay only a fraction of the costs of operating
the pool and the Medical Insurance Pool relies on assessments from the health insurance industry
to meet its operational and medical claim obligations. Health insurers receive credits against their
premium tax liability for a portion of the assessments they pay. These credits result in foregone
revenue to the general fund. Growth in eligibility, members, assessments and foregone revenues
cannot be determined by this agency.
According to NMHPC, 28 states require that the mandate’s likely impact on health insurance
premiums cost be assessed before a mandate is implemented. New Mexico is not one of those
states so the cost of adding this mandate is not known. While mandates make health insurance
more comprehensive, they also make it more expensive because mandates require insurers to pay
for care consumers previously funded out of their own pockets.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
PRC states that mental health benefits and parity in those benefits has been mandated for
employer sponsored group insurance in New Mexico. However, state law does not require parity
or mental health benefits at all in individual health insurance policies. Individuals who need
mental health benefits and who aren’t covered by an employer sponsored plan, cannot obtain
coverage for mental health benefits. The Medical Insurance Pool was established to give access
to individuals who were uninsurable. SB 536 extends that access to individuals who have
obtained individual health insurance policies, but do not have coverage for mental health
benefits.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
HSD notes that SB 536 relates to the goal of Improving Behavioral Health through an
Interagency and Collaborative Model and improving access, quality, and value of mental health
and substance abuse services of the Governor’s Performance and Accountability Contract. SB
536 also relates to HSD’s FY 2008 strategic plan.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Relates to SB 197
TECHNICAL ISSUES
HSD notes that SB 536 only addresses expanding mental health coverage and not behavioral
health coverage. Therefore, substance abuse and other behavioral health coverage would not be
included.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
NMHPC offers the following background:
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Senate Bill 536/HFl#1 – Page
3
The purpose of the New Mexico Medical Insurance Pool (NMMIP) Act, §59A-54-1
NMSA 1978, is to provide access to health insurance coverage to all residents of New Mexico
who are denied adequate health insurance and are considered uninsurable. It can be the insurer of
last resort for many New Mexicans who have run out of other options to procure individual
insurance, primarily due to the rare medical and expensive to treat conditions. All insurers within
the state are members of the pool as a condition of their authority to transact insurance business.
The pool is a governmental entity, but is administered by Blue Cross and Blue Shield of New
Mexico who handles eligibility, enrollment, member services and claims processing.
Per §59A-54-13 NMSA 1978, the coverage to be issued by the pool and its schedule of
benefits, exclusions and other limitations are established by the board pool but should, at a
minimum, reflect the levels of health insurance coverage generally available in New Mexico for
small group policies.
Fifty three medical conditions are recognized by the NMMIP as qualifying conditions
under which an individual could be eligible to participate in the pool. However, two of those
recognized conditions are alcohol/drug abuse and psychotic disorders. Consequently with those
two conditions already potentially covered under the pool as a dual diagnosis, there is already a
start towards a comprehensive mental health benefit under the pool.
Eligibility for pool coverage requires that an individual be a resident of the state with a
permanent street address, have a rejection notice for comprehensive coverage, or has a quote for,
or in-force rates that are higher than the pool’s qualifying rates, or has a rider, waiver or
limitation that reduces coverage due to the applicant’s personal health.
PED notes that in New Mexico an estimated 142,000 people 18 years of age or older experience
serious psychological distress. (SAMSHA, Office of Applied Studies, National Survey on Drug
Use and health, 2003 and 2004.) From the National Survey of Children’s Health, 2003, New
Mexico data indicate that 7% of school-aged children 6 to 17 years of age or approximately
22,600 children had a lifetime history of parent-reported depression or anxiety problems. From
the 2005 Youth Risk and Resiliency Survey the prevalence of persistent feelings of sadness and
hopelessness among New Mexico high school youth was 28.7%.
BS/mt