Mental Health

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Urgent Care Centers Opening For People With Mental lllness

KFF Health News Original

LOS ANGELES, Calif. — Hoping to keep more people with mental illness out of jails and emergency rooms, county health officials opened a mental health urgent care center Wednesday in South Los Angeles. The goal of The Martin Luther King, Jr. Mental Health Urgent Care Center is to stabilize and treat people in immediate crisis […]

San Antonio Police Have Radical Approach To Mental Illness: Treat It

KFF Health News Original

With specialized training and a redirection of resources, San Antonio’s police force is taking better care of mentally ill people, keeping them out of jail and saving $10 million a year.

Has Health Law Helped Young People Get Mental Health Treatment? Maybe

KFF Health News Original

Mental health issues like depression, anxiety and substance abuse often start in adolescence, then peak in young adulthood. But for young people who don’t have steady jobs or stable paychecks, getting help can be tough. A popular provision of the Affordable Care Act that took effect in 2010 aimed to make it easier for young […]

Advocates Worry Conn. Decision Could Undermine Autism Coverage

KFF Health News Original

That state has defined autism behavioral therapy as a type of medical benefit not subject to the mental health parity law, a move that allows insurers more latitude to limit the benefits they offer.

Parents Of Mentally Ill Adult Children Frustrated By Privacy Law

KFF Health News Original

Even if parents are providing health insurance, they often can’t find out about what’s happening when their adult children suffer from severe mental illnesses.

Cops In Conn. Train In Mental Health 101

KFF Health News Original

The intersection of law enforcement and mental health has been a huge issue in Connecticut since the Newtown shootings. One department is training 20 percent of its officers to handle people with mental illnesses better.

Nearly 4 Million Seriously Mentally Ill Still Without Insurance

KFF Health News Original

In states that agreed to expand Medicaid, about 3 million people who have those conditions are now eligible for coverage, however the 24 states that refused the Medicaid expansion have nearly millions with severe mental illness without insurance.