CDC highlights youth behavior risks and protections

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a series of reports based on the Youth Behavior Surveillance System, a set of surveys that tracks a broad range of behaviors, experiences and conditions that can lead to poor health among high school students.

The findings:

The main takeaway: Findings show the prevalence of and risks posed by ACEs, racism and other risk factors and the importance of engaged household adults, school connectedness and other protective factors. Preventing risk factors and supporting protective factors are both critical in promoting emotional wellbeing and preventing substance use.

Source: Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance — United States, 2023 (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)

Health plans resist new parity rules

Nearly immediately after the new parity rules were released, health plans threatened potential legal action to block them. Inseparable’s David Lloyd explores why in his op-ed, New mental health parity laws are already under threat.

The details:

But: Threats of legal action do not reflect disagreements over the rulemaking or implementation processes, but rather flat rejection of parity.

The bigger picture: This helps explain the 16 years of noncompliance with parity and why health plans have squeezed mental health and substance use disorder (MH/SUD) providers with unfairly low reimbursements and administrative burdens.

The data: In rejecting parity, insurers are blocking billions in potential savings that would serve their own financial interests.

Why it’s important: Health plans seem determined to chase short-term profits on mental health by delaying and denying valid claims, while their beneficiaries grow sicker without needed care or bankrupt themselves trying to pay for it.

Source: New mental health parity laws are already under threat (STAT)

DEA to extend telehealth prescribing rules

What’s new: The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) is signaling it will again extend temporary rules allowing the prescribing of controlled substances via telehealth. A final rule for the third temporary extension of the COVID prescribing flexibilities reached the White House for review last week.

But:

The push for rules:

Why it’s important: Telehealth flexibilities have allowed more people to access medications for opioid use disorder, and patients are at risk of discontinued care if new rules don’t support continued access.

Source: DEA poised to extend telehealth prescribing rules again (Politico); Frustrated telehealth providers say their businesses face ‘doom and gloom’ (STAT)

250 groups join overdose prevention effort

The news: The Biden administration announced that over 250 organizations, businesses and stakeholders across the country have made commitments to the White House Challenge to Save Lives from Overdose.

The details: New commitments came from groups including Amazon, several professional societies/unions, several local school districts and colleges/universities, local police departments and transit systems, Deloitte and the National Hockey League.

Source: FACT SHEET: Biden-⁠Harris Administration Announces Over 250 Organizations Made Voluntary Commitments to White House Challenge to Save Lives from Overdose (White House)