Patients in the U.S. are more likely to receive out-of-network behavioral health care, including treatment for mental health or substance use disorders, than they are to receive other medical and surgical services out of network. To date, out-of-network and in-network trends in the prices and use of ambulatory behavioral health care have been seldom described. Here we compare levels and growth of insurer-negotiated prices (allowed amounts), patient cost sharing, and use of psychotherapy services in network and out of network in a large, commercially insured U.S. population during 2007–17.
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