This might just be the year for mental health reform in Congress. A few months ago, practically no one would have said that. But on Wednesday of this week, the House Energy and Commerce Committee voted 53-0 to send H.R. 2646 - a significant mental health reform bill - on its way, most likely to the House floor for a July vote. And in recent weeks, a Senate bill has gathered steam, too, and that chamber could also now take up this legislation this summer. So what happened to make mental health reform a real possibility? First, members of Congress sincerely wanted to do something. The House proposal, sponsored by Rep. Tim Murphy of Pennsylvania and Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson of Texas, has 199 co-sponsors as of today. Our mental health system has been in disarray since - well, since as long as anyone can remember. Second, members have finally decoupled mental health reform from gun control. Mental illnesses and violence have never been stron...
An occasional column focusing on federal, state, and local health policy