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Impact of a Managed Behavioral Health Care Carve-Out: A Case Study of One HMO

Author

Listed:
  • Anne E. Brisson
  • Richard G. Frank
  • Elizabeth S. Notman
  • Julie A. Gazmararian

Abstract

In this study we examine a case study of a carve-out for mental health and substance abuse services between a local plan of a national HMO (N=120,213) and a local managed behavioral health care vendor (MBHC). This is one of the first studies which estimates the impact of an HMO carve-out on costs and patterns of MH/SA care. Three years of insurance claims data (1993-1995) were used for the analyses, with a new carve-out contract implemented in May 1994. The new carve-out arrangement included a new vendor, a change in the organizational structure of clinical services, and increased financial risk to the vendor for inpatient care. Descriptive and empirical analyses are reported on a continuously enrolled population (N=49,529). Results from the analyses showed the new carve-out arrangements had a significant impact on spending and utilization of services. Enrollees were 20% less likely to use MH/SA services after the implementation of the new carve-out, and inpatient MH/SA utilization dropped 50% under the new carve-out. Overall, MH/SA spending per enrollee dropped from approximately $4.90 per month to $2.20 per month. Outpatient MH/SA spending per user dropped 35% after the implementation of the new carve-out. Further research should be conducted to evaluate the impact on access and quality of care, given the substantial decrease in utilization and spending.

Suggested Citation

  • Anne E. Brisson & Richard G. Frank & Elizabeth S. Notman & Julie A. Gazmararian, 1997. "Impact of a Managed Behavioral Health Care Carve-Out: A Case Study of One HMO," NBER Working Papers 6242, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.
  • Handle: RePEc:nbr:nberwo:6242
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    Cited by:

    1. Raghavan, Ramesh & Leibowitz, Arleen A. & Andersen, Ronald M. & Zima, Bonnie T. & Schuster, Mark A. & Landsverk, John, 2006. "Effects of Medicaid managed care policies on mental health service use among a national probability sample of children in the child welfare system," Children and Youth Services Review, Elsevier, vol. 28(12), pages 1482-1496, December.

    More about this item

    JEL classification:

    • I11 - Health, Education, and Welfare - - Health - - - Analysis of Health Care Markets

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