2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhealeco.2015.06.008
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Heterogeneity and the effect of mental health parity mandates on the labor market

Abstract: Health insurance benefit mandates are believed to have adverse effects on the labor market, but efforts to document such effects for mental health parity mandates have had limited success. I show that one reason for this failure is that the association between parity mandates and labor market outcomes vary with mental distress. Accounting for this heterogeneity, I find adverse labor market effects for non-distressed individuals, but favorable effects for moderately distressed individuals and individuals with a… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…In contrast, use of sick leave decreased when workers obtained access to anti-retroviral treatments (Habyarimana, Mbakile, & Pop-Eleches, 2010) and minimally invasive surgery versus more aggressive procedures (Epstein, Groeneveld, Harhay, Yang, & Polsky, 2013). Further, labor supply increased among workers provided with AIDS treatment (Thirumurthy, Zivin, & Goldstein, 2008) and several studies show that mental healthcare treatment can increase labor supply and productivity (Berndt et al, 1998;Berndt, Bailit, Keller, Verner, & Finkelstein, 2000;Timbie, Horvitz-Lennon, Frank, & Normand, 2006;Andersen, 2015). Third, our findings contribute to the economic literature on policy spillover effects.…”
mentioning
confidence: 54%
“…In contrast, use of sick leave decreased when workers obtained access to anti-retroviral treatments (Habyarimana, Mbakile, & Pop-Eleches, 2010) and minimally invasive surgery versus more aggressive procedures (Epstein, Groeneveld, Harhay, Yang, & Polsky, 2013). Further, labor supply increased among workers provided with AIDS treatment (Thirumurthy, Zivin, & Goldstein, 2008) and several studies show that mental healthcare treatment can increase labor supply and productivity (Berndt et al, 1998;Berndt, Bailit, Keller, Verner, & Finkelstein, 2000;Timbie, Horvitz-Lennon, Frank, & Normand, 2006;Andersen, 2015). Third, our findings contribute to the economic literature on policy spillover effects.…”
mentioning
confidence: 54%
“…This study measures the labour supply by the weekly hours of work, which are widely used in many studies to examine the health–labour relationship [31,32,33]. In the CFPS data, however, there is no specific question to reflect a respondent’s weekly hours directly.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a neurobehavioral developmental disorder that is generally considered an impediment for occupational performance (Andersen, 2015; Fletcher, 2014), ADHD is increasingly attracting attention from researchers in the entrepreneurship domain (Antshel, 2018). Entrepreneurship scholars have proposed self-employment as a potentially attractive career option for individuals who are diagnosed with ADHD (Lerner, Hunt, & Verheul, 2018; Wiklund, Patzelt, & Dimov, 2016) or who experience its symptoms to a large extent (Lerner, Verheul, & Thurik, 2019; Verheul et al, 2016).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%