Addiction Treatment | Elements | Drug Rehab Treatment Centers

How to Fight for Coverage of Child’s Mental Illness

The second in a two-part series.

Among the more than 6 million American children estimated to suffer from a serious mental disorder are the cases that elude clear-and-quick diagnosis. These elusive diagnoses can happen when multiple conditions camouflage or overlap the traits of one another. And the parents of those youths can face years of dead ends, of drug trial-and-error, to relieve their children’s anxieties or compulsions, and limited insurance coverage for the steep cost.

Anne Grady is the mother of a son whose discontent was glaring before he left the hospital, and his condition continues as he nears age 12. But coping skills and techniques Grady learned over the years while doggedly seeking help for her son paid off. Those lessons are part of a new book called 52 Strategies for Life, Love & Work, a compilation of easy-to-apply strategies for improving every aspect of your personal and professional life regardless of the hand you’ve been dealt.

Grady specializes in what she dubs “personal and organizational transformation.” She bluntly, often mirthfully, shares how she managed to launch her career, become pregnant (and bedridden for most of her pregnancy), single-parent a high-needs child, and eventually craft a life and household that allowed her to pay the bills and get quality care for her son.

Just this morning, she said, while walking the dogs around the neighborhood before school, her son became frustrated when she told him that he could not pull off the berries of every bush along their route.

“He said, ‘I hate you, you stupid jerk!’ and people are walking by, obviously judging you, giving you that look,” Grady said.

But at least she’s found a diagnosis for his supreme irritability and hair-trigger fury, and the combination of 14 pills a day that medicate him seem to be working.

In general, our country still doesn’t view mental illness as a health condition that rightly falls under the same tent as medical care. Grady said she was often told that her son’s mental illness, while difficult, did not rise to the need for hospitalization. In order to prove the severity of his condition, Grady said she had to wait for his threats or outbursts, and, while keeping herself safe, manage to videotape them.

“What parent would be asked to come back later when their child’s cancer reached stage 4?” she asked rhetorically. “But you can take a blood test or an exam that proves cancer or diabetes.”

Here is Grady’s take for the overall problems and some tips for dealing with an elusive diagnosis and insurance company resistance:

The Problems:

The Solutions:

For help and referrals, try the National Alliance for Mental Illness.

By: Nancy Wride