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    Thursday, May 09, 2024

    In latest policy rollout, Clinton puts forward agenda to combat mental illness

    Hillary Clinton on Monday put forward a package of initiatives aimed at improving the plight of tens of millions of Americans coping with mental illness and pledged, if elected president, to hold a White House conference on the issue within her first year in office.

    The plan, the Democratic nominee said, seeks to fully integrate mental health services into the nation's health-care system during her tenure as president. Measures include a national suicide prevention initiative, higher payments for providers in the Medicaid program, an emphasis on treatment over jail for low-level criminal offenders with mental health issues and the creation of new housing and job opportunities.

    Clinton also pledges increased investment in brain and behavioral science research and to fully enforce prior laws that require mental health coverage to be an essential benefit in health insurance plans.

    The policy rollout was the latest from a candidate who has sought to make a virtue out of her wide-ranging and detailed policy agenda in her race against Republican Donald Trump. Last week Clinton and her running mate, Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia, touted a series of steps to help small businesses, holding a roundtable discussion and national conference call to draw attention to their new initiatives.

    Clinton plans to hold a similar call Monday amid an extended fundraising swing in the Hamptons.

    Clinton's mental health agenda overlaps some with a plan to address drug and alcohol addiction, which was a focus during her Democratic nominating contest with Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont.

    According to a government study, about 1 in 5 adults - or 43.6 million people - had a mental illness in 2014, with nearly 10 million of those experiencing a serious condition, such as schizophrenia or bipolar disorder.

    The same study said that 2.8 million adolescents had a major depressive episode during the past year.

    Clinton's plan also cites the burdens of military veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan experiencing post-traumatic stress and depression, and the "complicating life circumstances" of Americans grappling with drugs and addiction, as well as homelessness.

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