Author Topic: Defense bill mandates yearly mental health checkups for troops  (Read 643 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

rangerrebew

  • Guest
Defense bill mandates yearly mental health checkups for troops
« on: December 13, 2014, 02:29:45 pm »





Defense bill mandates yearly mental health checkups for troops


By Patricia Kime, Staff Writer 4:01 p.m. EST December 11, 2014
 

The defense policy bill passed by the House last week and now pending in the Senate will change how often troops get mental health exams, where they fill some prescriptions and how long they stay in a hospital for mental health treatment.

The bill, which authorizes $30.7 billion for the defense health program, rejected Pentagon proposals to consolidate Tricare into a single plan — an idea that would have altered the medical program for nearly all Tricare beneficiaries except active-duty troops — but still makes significant changes.

Among the largest is a requirement that all active-duty and Selected Reserve troops receive one-on-one mental health screenings once a year.

The assessments can coincide with annual physical exams or pre- or post-deployment assessments, but they must be face-to-face, according to the defense policy legislation. In addition, deployed troops also must have an in-person mental health exam once every 180 days of deployment.

Sens. Joe Donnelly, D-Ind., and Roger Wicker, R-Miss., who proposed the new requirements, said they are needed to help break down the stigma of seeking help for mental health issues.

Donnelly named his original bill for Jacob Sexton, a 21-year-old National Guardsmen who fatally shot himself while home on leave from Afghanistan in 2009. As a Guard member, he had access to online assessments but was required to have a face-to-face exam only once every five years.

The legislation, which also requires the Defense Department to provide a report to Congress on in-person mental health assessments, is intended to fill gaps in current requirements, the lawmakers said.

Donnelly called suicide a "service-wide problem," adding: "Beating this scourge is a critical component of military readiness."​

Another change included in the legislation that is sure to have an impact on most Tricare beneficiaries is a requirement that Tricare patients who take name-brand medications for chronic conditions fill them at a military pharmacy or with the Tricare home delivery program starting Oct. 1.

Details have yet to be released by DoD, but the bill essentially forces Tricare beneficiaries to use military pharmacies or mail order for prescriptions for long-term medical conditions unless they use generic brands.

The new requirement will save the Pentagon money: Last year, DoD's efforts to move retail prescriptions to mail or military facilities, including a program requiring Tricare For LIfe beneficiaries to use the mail or military pharmacies, saved $74.8 million, according to DoD.

But the move also will save Tricare patients cash as well. With prescription copayments included in the new legislation, the cost of a 30-day prescription at a retail pharmacy for name-brand medications will rise to $20 under the new legislation, while the same prescription is provided at no-charge at military treatment facilities. Moreover, a 90-day mail prescription will cost just $16.

Beneficiaries still will be able to fill prescriptions for name-brand drugs for acute illnesses at Tricare network retail pharmacies as well as prescriptions for generic brands, which will cost $8 for a 30-day prescription.

Another significant change in the bill will greatly benefit military family members and troops struggling with severe mental health conditions: The new legislation lifts limits on the number of days Tricare covers inpatient psychiatric care, currently 30 total days per fiscal years for patients 19 and older and 45 days for patients 18 and younger.

The change "removes a potential barrier to receipt of mental health care that does not exist for other medical or surgical care," lawmakers wrote in the explanatory report accompanying the bill.

A provision offered by Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., to require Tricare to cover the cost of breast-feeding equipment, support and counseling for moms who want to nurse their infants also made it into the final version of the bill.

That change aligns Tricare with the requirements of the Affordable Care Act, which mandates that health insurers cover lactation equipment, counseling and support.

Other requirements in the bill include mandating DoD to provide reports to Congress on issues, including:

*The reduction of Tricare Prime service areas.

*The use of burn pits in deployed settings.

*Fertility treatments for injured service members.

*Service resiliency programs and transition care for troops diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder.

Staff writer Leo Shane III contributed to this report.

http://www.militarytimes.com/story/military/capitol-hill/2014/12/11/defense-bill-tricare-troops-health/20147081/
« Last Edit: December 13, 2014, 02:30:38 pm by rangerrebew »