CMS Outlines Strategy to Strengthen Behavioral Health
Care
The
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) shared our vision to
make equitable, high-quality, affordable, data-informed care for mental
health and substance use challenges available to the people served by
our programs, as outlined in Health Affairs.
CMS
recently released a Behavioral Health Strategy that
demonstrates the Biden-Harris Administration’s ongoing efforts to
support the Strategy to Address Our National Mental Health
Crisis and underscores the importance of access,
equity, quality, and effective data integration in preventing and
treating mental health conditions, substance use disorders and acute
and chronic pain.
The
CMS Behavioral Health Strategy consists of five bold and interrelated
goals:
- Strengthen equity and
quality in behavioral health care;
- Improve access to
substance use disorders prevention, treatment and recovery
services;
- Ensure effective pain
treatment and management;
- Improve access to and
quality of mental health care and services; and
- Utilize data to inform
effective actions and measure impact on behavioral health.
The
CMS Behavioral Health Strategy seeks to remove barriers to care and
services, and to adopt a data-informed approach to evaluate our
behavioral health programs and policies. The Strategy will strive to
support a person’s whole emotional and mental well-being and promotes
person-centered behavioral health care.
This
is part of HHS’ ongoing efforts to support President Joe Biden’s
whole-of-government strategy to transform mental health services for
all Americans—a key part of the President’s Unity Agenda that is
reflected in the President’s Fiscal Year 2023 budget. Following the
President’s State of the Union in March, Secretary Becerra kicked off the
HHS National Tour to Strengthen Mental Health to address the mental
health challenges that have been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic,
including substance use, youth mental health, and suicide.
For
additional details on the Strategy, please visit the CMS Behavioral Health Strategy page.
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