J Clin Psychol Med Settings. 2025 Oct 25. doi: 10.1007/s10880-025-10102-3. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
Innovative behavioral health interventions in medical settings are often constrained by financial and structural barriers within the U.S. health insurance system. Providers are caught between two billing pathways: DSM-based codes, which do not reflect health-focused interventions, and health and behavior codes, which remain inconsistently recognized and poorly reimbursed. This disconnect makes it difficult to sustain innovative care despite clear clinical benefit. Moreover, it stifles clinical advancements and contributes to health inequity. The Comfort Ability® Program (CAP) intervention, a family-based, group treatment for pediatric chronic pain, illustrates both the promise and the challenge of this landscape. The CAP intervention integrates CBT, ACT, MI, and behavior management strategies in a comprehensive one-day format. It has been adopted by more than 45 healthcare institutions worldwide and demonstrates improved outcomes and reduced barriers to care. However, despite clinical success and scalability, CAP faces many reimbursement obstacles in the U.S., reflecting broader systemic issues. This manuscript reviews psychology billing reforms, outlines system-level challenges working within medical settings, and discusses real-world implications for providers striving to deliver integrated, patient-centered care. We propose concrete steps to support clinicians in navigating current barriers while advocating for system-level reforms that can sustain innovation in behavioral health delivery.
PMID:41139145 | DOI:10.1007/s10880-025-10102-3