vida: extract claims from 2026-04-30-rti-kennedy-forum-mental-health-reimbursement-27pct-gap
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- Source: inbox/queue/2026-04-30-rti-kennedy-forum-mental-health-reimbursement-27pct-gap.md - Domain: health - Claims: 1, Entities: 0 - Enrichments: 2 - Extracted by: pipeline ingest (OpenRouter anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5) Pentagon-Agent: Vida <PIPELINE>
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type: claim
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domain: health
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description: The reimbursement differential drives provider network opt-out which creates narrow networks, but enforcement targets the network gap rather than the underlying rate structure
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confidence: likely
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source: RTI International 2024 report, Kennedy Forum Mental Health Parity Index 2025, 4th Annual MHPAEA Report March 2026
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created: 2026-04-30
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title: "Mental health providers are reimbursed 27.1% less than medical/surgical providers for comparable services creating a structural access barrier that MHPAEA enforcement cannot address because the law requires comparable processes not comparable rates"
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agent: vida
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sourced_from: health/2026-04-30-rti-kennedy-forum-mental-health-reimbursement-27pct-gap.md
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scope: structural
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sourcer: RTI International / The Kennedy Forum
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supports: ["mhpaea-enforcement-closes-coverage-gaps-but-not-access-gaps-because-payers-differentially-treat-mental-health-versus-medical-reimbursement-rates", "the-mental-health-supply-gap-is-widening-not-closing-because-demand-outpaces-workforce-growth-and-technology-primarily-serves-the-already-served-rather-than-expanding-access"]
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related: ["mhpaea-enforcement-closes-coverage-gaps-but-not-access-gaps-because-payers-differentially-treat-mental-health-versus-medical-reimbursement-rates", "the-mental-health-supply-gap-is-widening-not-closing-because-demand-outpaces-workforce-growth-and-technology-primarily-serves-the-already-served-rather-than-expanding-access"]
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# Mental health providers are reimbursed 27.1% less than medical/surgical providers for comparable services creating a structural access barrier that MHPAEA enforcement cannot address because the law requires comparable processes not comparable rates
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RTI International's 2024 report documents that mental health and substance use disorder providers receive reimbursement rates 27.1% lower than medical/surgical physicians for comparable office visits. This finding was independently confirmed by The Kennedy Forum's Mental Health Parity Index for Illinois (May 2025), which found mental health services reimbursed 27% lower than physical health on average. The mechanism chain operates as follows: (1) insurers set mental health reimbursement 27% below medical rates, (2) mental health providers cannot sustain practices at these rates and opt out of insurance networks, (3) this creates narrow networks that patients cannot access, (4) MHPAEA enforcement identifies narrow networks as NQTL violations, (5) but remediation addresses the network gap rather than the reimbursement differential. The 4th Annual MHPAEA Report (March 2026) documented that payers actively raise medical/surgical provider reimbursement when network gaps are identified but do NOT apply the same methodology to mental health networks, even where gaps exist. This is documented differential treatment, not accidental. The critical regulatory gap: MHPAEA requires payers to apply the SAME processes, strategies, and evidentiary standards for setting behavioral health rates as they use for medical/surgical rates—but does not require the rates themselves to be comparable. This means the 27.1% differential can persist indefinitely as long as insurers claim they used comparable processes, even when the outcomes diverge systematically. This explains why enforcement closes coverage gaps but not access gaps—the structural misalignment is the rate differential, not procedural compliance.
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@ -23,3 +23,10 @@ The 2025 MHPAEA Report to Congress documents a specific structural mechanism exp
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**Source:** Georgia OCI, January 2026, $25M fines across 22 insurers
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**Source:** Georgia OCI, January 2026, $25M fines across 22 insurers
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Georgia's $25M enforcement action against 22 insurers (including all major national carriers: UnitedHealthcare, Anthem, Cigna, Aetna, Humana, Kaiser) documents systematic NQTL violations and benefit design discrepancies. Violations identified through 2023-2025 market conduct examinations show procedural parity failures are universal across the industry. However, enforcement targets NQTLs and benefit design—not reimbursement rate differentials. State fines address whether coverage exists and how restrictively it's administered, but cannot compel rate parity that would improve provider participation.
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Georgia's $25M enforcement action against 22 insurers (including all major national carriers: UnitedHealthcare, Anthem, Cigna, Aetna, Humana, Kaiser) documents systematic NQTL violations and benefit design discrepancies. Violations identified through 2023-2025 market conduct examinations show procedural parity failures are universal across the industry. However, enforcement targets NQTLs and benefit design—not reimbursement rate differentials. State fines address whether coverage exists and how restrictively it's administered, but cannot compel rate parity that would improve provider participation.
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## Supporting Evidence
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**Source:** RTI International 2024, Kennedy Forum 2025, 4th MHPAEA Report 2026
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RTI International 2024 report quantifies the reimbursement differential at 27.1% for office visits. The Kennedy Forum's Illinois Mental Health Parity Index (May 2025) independently confirmed 27% lower reimbursement for mental health versus physical health. The 4th Annual MHPAEA Report (March 2026) documented that payers actively raise medical/surgical reimbursement when network gaps are found but do NOT apply the same methodology to mental health networks—this is documented deliberate differential treatment, not accidental.
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@ -7,10 +7,13 @@ date: 2024-11
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domain: health
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domain: health
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secondary_domains: []
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secondary_domains: []
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format: analysis
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format: analysis
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status: unprocessed
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status: processed
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processed_by: vida
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processed_date: 2026-04-30
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priority: high
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priority: high
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tags: [mental-health, reimbursement-rates, parity, workforce, access, rti, kennedy-forum, structural-mechanism]
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tags: [mental-health, reimbursement-rates, parity, workforce, access, rti, kennedy-forum, structural-mechanism]
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intake_tier: research-task
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intake_tier: research-task
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extraction_model: "anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5"
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## Content
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## Content
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