Posts Tagged ‘Health Insurance’

Casey Amendment Would Protect and Ensure Children’s Health Care

August 3rd, 2010

U.S. Senator Bob Casey (D-PA), a member of the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee today introduced an amendment to protect and ensure health care coverage for low-income children.  The amendment would, in part, continue full funding for the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) through 2019, ensure affordable coverage and high quality benefits for children and make it easier for families to enroll in the program.

“We have had some victories in the effort to prevent the dismantling of CHIP, but there is more work to do in order to preserve and improve health care coverage for children,” said Senator Casey.  “My amendment to the Senate health care reform bill will strengthen coverage for children in CHIP through 2019 to ensure quality care for all vulnerable children. The benefits of health care for children, particularly low-income children and children with special needs, are beyond dispute.  Such care will not only help kids d » Read more: Casey Amendment Would Protect and Ensure Children’s Health Care

Healthcare for children

August 2nd, 2010

In 2006, the figures released by the Census Bureau suggested that almost nine million children in the US were uninsured. This is despite the fact that about 28 million children were allowed access to Medicaid and a further seven million received help from the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP). Put another way, almost 12% of children were uninsured. In a society that claims to protect the interests of children, this makes for depressing reading. In recent years, the majority of children have been covered by health plans paid for by their parents’ employers. Unfortunately, the cost of family plans has been rising more steeply than for individual coverage. With employee contributions rising faster than inflation, many parents have been forced to drop out of group cover. This has left Medicaid with the increasing task of providing cover for low-income families. Where parents earn more than the maximum allowed for Medicaid eligibility, SCHIP targets fam » Read more: Healthcare for children

Health bill could raise Oklahoma’s costs

August 1st, 2010

The health insurance reform bill approved by the House on Nov. 7 could add more than 318,000 Oklahomans to the state’s Medicaid program and cost the state $128 million more each year, according to estimates from the state authority that administers the health care program for the poor.

“It will have a cost at a very tough time from a revenue standpoint in being able to afford it,” said Nico Gomez, deputy chief executive officer at the Oklahoma Health Care Authority.

Gomez said the Health Care Authority has been trying to estimate the potential impact of various congressional proposals on health care; state legislative leaders and members of Congress have been seeking the estimates because of the major expansion of Medicaid envisioned in both the House and Senate bills.

Medicaid is a federal-state health care program that, in Oklahoma, covers primarily pregnant women and children.

But the House bill would use the program » Read more: Health bill could raise Oklahoma’s costs