The fast pace of the reform has threatened the early partnership between the Mental Hygiene Administration and Maryland's mental health community, including providers, consumers, families, and advocacy organizations. It has also raised doubts about the capacity of the Mental Hygiene Administration to manage the full range of carved-out services. In April 1997 the piecemeal release of proposed fee-for-service rates for the upcoming year resulted in a firestorm of community protest as mental health agencies projected that their budgets might be reduced by more than 40 percent. Concerted political pressure was applied, and the Mental Hygiene Administration was forced to quickly put together a transition plan in which community mental health centers were offered up to a year to convert to fee-for-service financing if they were willing to take a 10 percent reduction in grant funds and revenue. Most eligible providers took this option as the lesser of two evils.
The reform proposal and resulting debate have shifted the focus from clinical outcomes to fiscal solvency for participating providers and the state. Faced with inadequate resources for decades, public mental health systems have already introduced many efficiencies and low-cost alternative care strategies. Therefore, the easier cost reductions derived from applying managed care principles to private care systems are not as feasible in some public settings.
Facing budget shortfalls, community providers in Maryland, such as county health departments, were forced to reconsider their commitment to providing mental health care. Several counties announced their intentions to end the direct provision of mental health services, and they have subsequently closed outpatient clinic services. Other providers reduced clinical staff, increased caseloads, and discontinued nonreimbursable activities. For example, our agency has eliminated a variety of clinical case conferences so that clinicians can meet the higher productivity standards required in the plan. Traditional community providers, who developed substantive expertise and continuous therapeutic relationships while delivering services under state regulations, have seemingly been cast as part of the problem rather than identified as crucial to solutions. The states' traditional commitment to a stable and long-term relationship with providers is yielding to pressure for competitive bidding.