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
You're Not Dreaming - Prior Auth Reform Passes the DC Council
November 7, 2023, is a day DC physicians have wanted to see for a long time. That is because today prior authorization reform has passed the DC Council.
B25-124, the Prior Authorization Reform Amendment Act, passed via the Council's consent agenda at its legislative meeting. With the second vote to pass, the bill is considered passed by the Council and will now go to the Mayor for her signature.
This bill is not perfect and it will not solve every prior auth issue in the District. But when it goes into effect, it will allow DC to join 40 other states who have passed some restrictions on prior authorization.
MSDC thanks Councilmember Brooke Pinto and the other council members who introduced and supported the bill. We also thank MedChi DC, other DC physician organizations, the American Medical Association, DC Hospital Association, DC Primary Care Association, DC Behavioral Health Association, and other healthcare organizations that helped advocate for this legislation.
The bill will now go to the Mayor who will hopefully sign the bill. Once she signs it - or it goes into effect without her signature - the bill will go through a Congressional review period. After that, the legislation can go into effect. We anticipate this will be in the early spring of 2024.
Our advocacy work is not yet done. The legislation applies immediately to private insurers but must be funded to apply to Medicaid. MSDC and partners will continue to push for funding for the bill in the DC budget. MSDC will also seek technical corrections and updates in future bills to adapt to the changing healthcare environment and address if/when insurers avoid the bill's requirements.
Leave a comment
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.