The AHA today released a report describing the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on behavioral health in the U.S. Among other topics, the report looks at in-person utilization during the pandemic; the increased need for behavioral health services; the effects on specific populations, including the health care workforce, youth, LGBTQ+, and historically underrepresented groups; and innovative ways of providing behavioral health services. In addition, the report highlights legislative and regulatory actions taken during the pandemic, as well as AHA policy recommendations for future actions. 
 
鈥淏ehavioral health care has long been underfunded, underappreciated and stigmatized,鈥 the report notes. 鈥淭he AHA has prioritized advocacy around behavioral health in general, and many of the advocacy strategies in which the organization has engaged prior to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic would address many of the issues raised in this brief. For example, investments in the behavioral health workforce, the integration of behavioral health into physical health care, the enforcement of federal and state parity laws, and improvements in reimbursement rates for behavioral health providers would help fill the critical gaps in access worsened by the pandemic.鈥
 

Related News Articles

Headline
Boston Medical Center鈥檚 Jeff Schneider, M.D., associate chief medical officer, designated institutional official and chair of the Graduate Medical Education鈥
Blog
Even before the COVID pandemic, the mental health and wellness of our young people was failing. The pandemic exacerbated the crisis and made it difficult for鈥
Headline
A new AHA video highlights how Corewell Health is transforming youth behavioral health care access in rural Michigan through school-based clinics and鈥
Headline
The Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and the Treasury May 15 announced that they will not enforce the 2024 mental health parity final rule, a鈥
Headline
Overdose deaths in the U.S. fell 26.9% last year to 80,391, according to estimates from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The agency reported鈥
Headline
Beth Heinz, senior vice president, Women鈥檚 and Children鈥檚 Services at Yale New Haven Health, and Cheri Johnson, chief nursing officer, Woman鈥檚 Hospital in鈥