Insured Georgians can access mental health, addiction treatment

Gov. Brian Kemp signs mental health legislation
Gov. Brian Kemp signed the speaker’s mental health reform bill into law on the last day of the 2022 legislative session. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

If your payments for mental health services are higher than for your primary care doctor or you can’t see your mental health provider as often, your rights in Georgia may have been violated.

This is regardless of whether Georgia residents have health care coverage through Medicaid or a private insurance provider.

To make sure people — especially in underserved and diverse communities — know about the law, The Carter Center’s Mental Health Program is showing insured people what to do to get treatment for depression or substance use disorder.

The campaign started in Savannah and Albany with billboards directing people to www.georgiamentalhealth.com to get more information.

Residents of Georgia are some of the least likely in the nation to access health insurance of any kind, in part because of the state’s decision not to expand Medicaid.

Mental Health Parity Act

In 2022, Georgia passed its Mental Health Parity Act, showing a commitment to addressing behavioral health needs across the state. That includes language in Georgia’s law making it clear what violations the state attorney general is enforcing when keeping insurance companies accountable.

In 2008, Congress enacted the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act, requiring  insurance coverage for mental health conditions, including substance use disorders, to be no more restrictive than insurance coverage for other medical conditions.

The Carter Center Mental Health Program Director Dr. Eve Byrd and Senior Program Associate Sarah Phillips lead the Georgia Parity Collaborative that worked to pass the legislation. The programs are monitoring parity implementation and partnering on the awareness campaign.

Byrd said that former First Lady Rosalynn Carter’s legacy of mental health advocacy includes her fight for health insurance parity.

“The world is a different place now, but she was clear about how we needed to carry her legacy forward,” Byrd said of Carter, who died this month at age 96. “There’s still a lot of work to be done. A lot has been accomplished, but we still have a lot of work to be done.