ABSTRACT
The current third-party fee-for-service mode of reimbursement for mental health services emphasizes individual, pathology-oriented intervention and thus has disadvantages for clients and carriers. This article focuses on the mode's effects on outpatient services for children, youth, and families. It examines the ways in which common payment modes seriously limit services and create an incentive for psychologists to take a narrow, often nonempirical, perspective. Suggestions that allow for multisystem, ecological skill building hinge on building relationships between psychologists and the carriers. Desired results take two forms: modification of contingencies between providers and carriers and modification of contingency between insured and carrier. Examples of each are presented.