The 2021 Mental Health Parity Grades Are In – Everybody Failed


Most group health plan sponsors understand that the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA) requires that coverage for mental health conditions and substance use disorders be no more restrictive than coverage for other medical and surgical conditions.  In 2020, Congress changed the law to require plans to perform and document comparative analyses of Non-Quantitative Treatment Limitations (NQTLs) by February 10, 2021.  The law also required the Department of Labor, Health and Human Services, and the Treasury Department to report back to Congress at the end of 2021 on whether plans are complying with the new law.  On January 25th, the agencies published their report, and although nobody in the first wave earned a passing grade, plan sponsors can learn much from the report in order to avoid a similar fate.

According to the report, the DOL issued 156 letters to plan sponsors and insurance providers requesting information about comparative analysis for NQTLs, and the initial responses were all insufficient.  But the report also contains helpful information for those sponsors who were not part of the initial investigation.

The agencies characterized the responses as generic, unresponsive, and lacking in sufficient detail and supporting documentation.  Examples of common deficiencies include:

The report also lists steps some sponsors or insurers have taken to bring their plans into compliance, including removal of these common exclusions:

Other actions included removing limitations on urine drug testing for substance use disorders and blanket pre-certification requirements for mental health and substance use disorder benefits.

Plan sponsors may want to consider taking these steps:


Jackson Lewis P.C. © 2025
National Law Review, Volume XII, Number 32