For Immediate Release: February 22, 2007
Bill to Provide Greater Access to Behavioral Health
Services Killed in Committee
State Sen. Debbe Leftwich said her
measure to improve access to behavioral health
care in Oklahoma is dead for two years after failing
to receive passage from a Senate committee on
Thursday. Leftwich said Senate Bill 452 would
have closed a loophole that currently prevents
thousands of Oklahomans from getting the treatment
they need.
“Republicans in the Senate Retirement and
Insurance Committee, two of which sell insurance
in the private sector, lined up and voted in lockstep
to protect their friends in the insurance industry
while Oklahomans seeking treatment for serious
illnesses have been shut out,” said Leftwich,
D-Oklahoma City.
Leftwich said the problem is that the largest
single insurance company in the state refuses
to cover the cost of seeing health care providers
such as licensed professional counselors, licensed
marriage and family therapists, behavioral health
professionals and advanced practice nurses. They
will cover treatment by an M.D. psychiatrist or
a PhD psychologist. However, those doctors are
generally based in metropolitan areas.
“That means thousands of people in rural
Oklahoma simply can’t get the help they
need,” said Leftwich. “This bill would
have guaranteed greater access for Oklahomans
and families who need behavioral health services
by ensuring that insurance companies follow the
intent of the existing law. As it is now, insurance
companies have found a loophole so big you could
drive a truck through it.”
Leftwich said before killing the bill, there was
a Republican attempt to amend the bill so that
all patients needing behavioral treatment would
have to first be seen by a doctor or psychologist.
She said that would actually have cost insurance
companies more money than her proposal, as those
doctors tend to charge higher rates to see patients.
“This leaves countless Oklahomans between
a rock and a hard place and unable to get the
care they need,” Leftwich said. “Many
people don’t have a choice about their insurance
coverage if it’s provided through their
job. Even those who can afford to pay for a psychiatrist
or psychologist out-of-pocket may not live close
enough to take advantage of those services. Oklahomans
have been sold out in favor of the powerful insurance
lobby.”
For more information contact:
Senator Leftwich's Office - (405) 521-5557