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
What to know about DC and the 2024 election
Locally, the 2024 election is over. The implications, however, are just beginning.
MSDC staff are analyzing the results of the national and local elections, and while there is still much we do not know, there are still some things that are clear the day after this election.
DC elections
- The DC Council members up for reelection all won: Robert White (at large), Christina Henderson (at large), Brooke Pinto (Ward 2), Janeese Lewis-George (Ward 4), and Trayon White (Ward 8). In Ward 7, Wendell Felder won the election to replace MSDC award winner Vincent Gray.
- Councilmember Gray would vacate the Hospital and Health Equity Committee Chairmanship in the next Council. However, the committee may go away with Gray stepping away from the Council. Council Chair Phil Mendelson will announce in the coming weeks the committee structure for 2025-2026 which will include Chairs and committee jurisdictions. Committee on Health Chair Christina Henderson should continue having oversight of the health realm.
National elections
- Congress oversees the District through two committees: Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, and House Committee on Oversight and Accountability. The Senate Committee's subcommittee of jurisdiction is Oversight of Government Management.
- NB there will be changes as members of Congress move around due to seniority and as other committee positions come available. But based on what we know, here are the players in Congress that could oversee DC affairs.
- The Senate will be controlled by Republicans. The current Homeland Security Ranking Member (presumed Chair) is Rand Paul (KY) and subcommittee ranking member is James Lankford (OK). Senator Paul trained as an ophthalmologist but has fought many of the health policies of the Biden Administration.
- The House majority is still up in the air. The Chair of the Oversight Committee is James Comer (KY) and the ranking member is Jamie Raskin (Maryland). DC Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton serves on the committee and 119th Congress rules could determine how active she could be.
How national election results can influence DC medicine
- Congress has a required review period for all District laws passed into law. Congress or the relevant committees can hold a vote to override a law before it goes into effect - this requires a majority in both chambers and the president signing the override bill. This means any bill passed by the Council, if it catches the eye of the Congressional majority or president, could be subject to review.
- As many know, the appropriations process allows the federal government to place restrictions or permissions for executing DC law. Long-time political people know that abortion riders and marijuana riders restricting how the District can implement policy in these areas are common. In the current Congress, proposed riders expanded to include things as mundane as no turn on red light laws. The new Congress could expand riders to prohibit DC government money from being spent on numerous health policies.
Want to learn more, stay engaged in this conversation, or be proactive on health policy in the District? Join the MSDC Advocacy Committee - our next call is tonight at 6pm. Contact Robert Hay at hay@msdc.org to learn more.
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.