MODEL LEGISLATION – WORKFORCE/LOAN FORGIVENESS

JUSTIFICATION

The Surgeon General, the National Institute of Mental Health, and the President’s New Freedom Commission on Mental Health have all recognized under-identification and the lack of treatment of mental illness in children and adolescents as a major problem. The Surgeon General reported in 1999 that only 20% of children and adolescents in need of treatment for mental illness receive it. Kids that do not receive treatment for mental illness are at high-risk for school failure, substance abuse and entrance into the juvenile justice system. States have a severe shortage of children’s mental health professionals, primarily child and adolescent psychiatrists. The shortage of child psychiatrists creates a burden for primary care physicians, who are not trained in mental health, and must diagnose and treat children if there are no child psychiatrists available.

The projected need for child and adolescent psychiatrists is 30,000; currently, there are roughly about 8,000. The shortage of child psychiatrists, coupled with increases in psychotropic drug use, requires children with mental illness to see other practitioners that may not be trained or experienced to treat these patients properly.

According to the U.S. Bureau of Health Professions the United States will have only two-thirds of the child and adolescent psychiatrists required to meet needs in 2020. While the shortage varies by state and type of community, the problem is much worse in rural areas.

Many factors can be contributed to the shortage of child and adolescent psychiatrists. However chief among them is the educational disincentives to pursuing a child psychiatry residency, which requires two additional years of training in children’s issues after completion of a three-year program in general psychiatry. Some programs report that, due to additional training and educational debt, up to 50 percent of students interested in child psychiatry change to adult psychiatry after the first three years.

The shortage of child psychiatry is having a significant effect on primarily care. The shortage of child and adolescent psychiatrists places a heavy burden on primary care physicians. Pediatricians, in particular, report that they do not have the full training in pediatric psychopharmacology or the time to do comprehensive assessments of children and adolescent with mental illnesses (AAP survey, 2004).

The lack of child psychiatrists is impacting the use of psychotropic medication for medical management for children with mental illness. The FDA black box warning on antidepressants has increased the need for better physician monitoring of children and adolescents taking these medications. According to TADS (Treatment of Adolescent Depression Study, NMIH) results in 2004, combined medication and cognitive-behavioral therapy is the most effective form of treatment for adolescent depression, but with the shortage of available child and adolescent psychiatrists to provide this treatment, few adolescents receive this optimal treatment plan. In February 2005, JAMA reported that because of the black box warning, the demand for child and adolescent psychiatrists is likely to increase as primary care providers stop prescribing antidepressants and opt to refer patients to child and adolescent psychiatrists for psychotherapy.

DEFINITIONS

“Child Psychiatrist” means a physician who specializes in the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of mental illness with additional training in child psychiatry.

“Department” means the Department of Health of the State.

“Program” means the Child Psychiatrist Loan Forgiveness Program.

LOAN FORGIVENESS PROGRAM

The Program will be administered by the Department.

  1. Applications – The Department shall promulgate guidelines for the selection of candidates to the program based upon the following criteria:
  2. Demonstrated need.
  3. Willingness to continue practicing as a child psychiatrist in the state after completing the program.
  4. Eligibility – A program applicant must be:
  5. A citizen of the United States
  6. Licensed to practice medicine in the state.
  7. Verification – The department shall monitor and verify a physician’s fulfillment of all requirements of the program.
  8. Amount of Loan Forgiveness – A physician accepted into the program may be reimbursed an amount up to $50,000 per year for each year of specialty training in child psychiatry based upon the following repayment assistance schedule:
  9. First year of service, 20%.
  10. Second year of service, 20%.
  11. Third year of service, 20%.
  12. Fourth year of service, 20%.
  13. Fifth year of service, 20%.
  14. Contract – Physician receiving loan forgiveness shall enter into a contract with the department. The contract shall include, but not be limited to, the following terms and conditions:
  15. The physician shall agree to practice not fewer than the five full consecutive years in the state immediately following completion of specialty training pursuant to the schedule provided in this section.
  16. The physician shall agree to practice on a full time basis.
  17. The physician shall permit the department to monitor compliance with the work requirement.
  18. The contract shall be renewable on an annual basis upon certification by the department that the physician has complied with the terms of the contract.
  19. The contract shall terminate if the physician dies, is not able to perform the duties of a child psychiatrist or is not able to maintain the physician’s license to practice medicine due to physical or mental disability.
  20. If the physician’s license to practice is suspended or revoked, the department shall have the authority to terminate the physician’s participation in the program and demand repayment of all loan forgiveness payments rendered to date.
  21. A physician who fails to begin or complete the obligations contracted for shall reimburse the state all amounts received under this act and interest thereon as determined by the department. Both the physician and the department shall make every effort to resolve conflicts in order to prevent a breach of contract.
  22. Contract enforcement – the department shall have the authority to seek garnishment of wages for the collection of damages provided for in subsection (5)(g).
  23. Disqualification – Any person who knowingly or intentionally procures, obtains or aids another to procure or obtain loan forgiveness under this act through fraudulent means shall be disqualified from participation and shall be liable to the department for an amount equal to three times the amount obtained.
  24. Tax Consequences -- Loan forgiveness payments received by a physician shall not be considered taxable income.
  25. Limitation – Participation in the program is limited to no more than four physicians a year unless sufficient funding is available to reimburse more than four physicians a year in accordance with this act.
  26. Regulations – The department may adopt regulations and procedures necessary to carry out the purposes of this act.
  27. Funding – Loan forgiveness repayments shall be made to the extent that funds are appropriated to the Child Psychiatrist Loan Forgiveness Program by the State Legislature.