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Mental health care begins with screenings and preventive care. This National Depression and Mental Health Screening Month, we are highlighting the importance of receiving regular mental health screenings and staying alert to changes in your mental health.
Mental health is a complex issue, and everyone’s experiences and circumstances affect their mental health in different ways. Personal, family, community, and structural factors all influence an individual’s mental health, and adverse circumstances (such as co-occurring health problems, poverty, and inequality) can be particularly detrimental to mental well-being.
Social and structural circumstances can put older adults and people with disabilities at higher risk for depression.
Such social and structural circumstances can put older adults and people with disabilities at higher risk for depression and other mental health problems. People with disabilities face accessibility and mobility barriers as well as systemic discrimination in social and economic life. This makes it especially difficult for people with disabilities to access community and social support independently and regularly. As they age, older adults also experience physical, mental, and social changes that can damage their mental health. New or worsening health conditions can disable and isolate older adults and leave them with inadequate support and accommodations, and social losses caused by bereavement or institutionalization can worsen feelings of sadness and anxiety.
When you first enroll in Medicare, your provider is required to assess your potential for depression and other mental health conditions during your Welcome to Medicare Visit and first Annual Wellness Visit. This initial assessment includes questions about your family history and other risk factors for depression and other mental health conditions, but it is not necessarily accompanied by a formal screening, which involves a questionnaire about symptoms you may be experiencing.
You do not need to be experiencing symptoms of depression or alcohol misuse to qualify for a screening.
Medicare Part B covers both depression screenings and alcohol misuse screenings once a year if they are part of a primary care visit, such as during your Annual Wellness Visit. These are offered at no cost to the patient when the primary care provider participates in Original Medicare or is in-network with the beneficiary’s Medicare Advantage plan. However, a mental health screening that occurs in an emergency room, skilled nursing facility, or other inpatient hospital or rehabilitation facility is not considered part of primary care and is not covered in the same way.
Mental health treatment can be inpatient or outpatient (including partial hospitalization) depending on the patient’s needs. Inpatient mental health stays are subject to lifetime Part A limits, and cost sharing for both inpatient and outpatient care varies across plans.
You do not need to be experiencing symptoms of depression or alcohol misuse to qualify for a screening, and experts encourage being proactive about seeking mental health care. Getting regular screenings can help you and your doctor catch problems early and find treatment when needed.
Learn more about Medicare’s coverage of mental health screenings and services on Medicare Interactive.
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