IMPACT OF LAW AND REGULATION ON PROFESSIONAL PRACTICE AND USE OF MENTAL-HEALTH-SERVICES - AN EMPIRICAL-ANALYSIS

Citation
H. Dorken et al., IMPACT OF LAW AND REGULATION ON PROFESSIONAL PRACTICE AND USE OF MENTAL-HEALTH-SERVICES - AN EMPIRICAL-ANALYSIS, Professional psychology, research and practice, 24(3), 1993, pp. 256-265
Citations number
16
Categorie Soggetti
Psychology
ISSN journal
07357028
Volume
24
Issue
3
Year of publication
1993
Pages
256 - 265
Database
ISI
SICI code
0735-7028(1993)24:3<256:IOLARO>2.0.ZU;2-2
Abstract
This is a case study under natural conditions of the effects that laws and regulations have had on professional practice and mental health s ervice use in Hawaii from 1981 to 1989. Three major plans (Civilian He alth and Medical Program of the Uniformed Services [CHAMPUS J, Hawaii Medical Services Association [HMSA], and Medicaid) had the same fiscal intermediary and were served by the same pool of providers. Under con ditions of direct access, psychologists provided more outpatient servi ces than did psychiatrists. Under physician referral, the opposite was true. Trends over time are noted. To overturn certain restrictive Med icaid regulations, corrective legislation was introduced and enacted. Follow-up demonstrated that, when both psychologists and psychiatrists could certify mental impairment but the certifier could no longer be the therapist, service volume dropped-and so did public expenditure by $4.8 million (on removal of this conflict of interest, despite more t han doubling the number of practitioners who could certify).