Behavioral Health
Behavioral health is a major public health issue in the District of Columbia. Sadly, many of the legislative and regulatory initiatives around behavioral health are tied to other public health concerns, such as opioid addiction, maternal mortality, and health equity.
In partnership with the Washington Psychiatric Society, AMA, and American Psychiatric Association (APA), MSDC works to ensure that patients receive appropriate support for behavioral health issues, that the practice of psychiatry is supported in the District, and that psychiatrists are available to patients in the District.
MSDC was a proud supporter of the Behavioral Health Parity Act of 2017, which enshrined into law that all health plans offered by an insurance carrier meet federal requirements of the Wellstone/Domenici Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008.
MSDC Statements and Testimony of Behavioral Health Issues
25th Council period information coming soon
DC Releases Post-COVID Healthcare Report
Last weekend, the District government released a new report with "lessons learned" from the COVID pandemic.
Entitled "District of Columbia Department of Health COVID-19 Pandemic Health and Healthcare Recovery Report", the report has two halves. The first details the District's response to the pandemic and outlines how the District government acted to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on health, the economy, and society.
The second half contains recommendations going forward, and this is the focus of the report. This section breaks into five components:
- Health Planning
- Public Health and Healthcare Workforce
- Health Information Technology
- Health Care Facilities
- Community Health Services
Each component has an analysis and listed recommendations for the Council and District government to consider. You can read the entire report here, but below are a few items of interests to the physician community:
- Explore regional licensure reciprocity to allow local healthcare professionals to more easily practice in the District
- Examine whether new licensure categories are needed to reflect new modules of care
- Explore whether "certain procedures" that "traditionally require specific oversight" should be "re-examined" for more flexible supervision options.
- Assess and potentially redefine training or supervision levels with "an emphasis of supervision truly required for safe patient care".
- Push for common telehealth scopes of practice across state lines
- Provide consumers with instruments and training for telehealth monitoring
What is not in this report?
- Resources to address healthcare provider burnout and behavioral health interventions
- Re-examining the impact of the District's medical malpractice laws and how they may harm medical care.
- Invest in local medical education and how to retain students from local medical schools and allied health schools
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Sample of Legislation MSDC is Tracking in Behavioral Health
(see the whole list of bills here)
What does it do? The bill requires licensed health providers to complete 2 hours of CME on suicide prevention, assessment, and screening.
MSDC position: MSDC opposes the bill as written as the language does not encourage physician wellbeing or sufficient awareness of suicide prevention.
Current status: The bill had a hearing with the Committee on Health on June 10.