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Groups: MomsRising in The MotherHood! rss

Default_avatar Created by Cooper on July 13, 2007
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  • Wait a year for the doctor?

1 post

  • Photo-1 Emily 86 posts

    Posted 11 months ago
    Dear MomsRising Member,
    Imagine being told you couldn’t take your child to the doctor for a full year. What might happen if your child got strep throat and had to go without medical attention for months and months?
    This sad scenario will be a reality for many U.S. families if the rules aren’t fixed: Under new rules, made by the President, some children who depend on lower-cost health care coverage will have to wait a full year-with no insurance at all-to qualify for help. This outrageous requirement is part of a slate of changes made to limit the number of children who can benefit from the lower-cost health care coverage of the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP). We can’t believe that in a country where 1 in 9 children go without any health care coverage at all, there is any thought of more limits. This senseless rules change is especially surprising because SCHIP is supported by Democrats and Republicans alike.
    Everyone, it seems, except for the President, sees the value in giving kids healthcare. Let’s send a strong message together.
    TELL CONGRESS THAT KIDS CAN’T WAIT FOR HEALTHCARE BY GOING TO THIS LINK: http://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/organizationsORG/momsrising/campaign.jsp?campaign_KEY=12417
    When Congress returns from its recess in September, it will take up funding for the State Children’s Health Insurance Program again. Tell your representatives that they must reverse these new and backward-thinking rules (described below), and fully fund the program.
    THE SCOOP ON SCHIP: This federal health care program (one of our favorites!) helps families afford health coverage for their children (and this help is critically important because right now 1 in 9 children are without health care coverage at all!). Here’s how it works—it gives funds to the 50 States, who then use the money to create health care coverage programs for kids. Families that don’t meet the low-income standards for Medicaid coverage, but still don’t make enough to purchase private insurance, can apply for their children to be covered by the state-run plans.
    What makes this program so powerful is that it allows states to decide what level of assistance makes sense for their populations—taking into account the state economy, local cost of living, and the total number of uninsured children in their state.
    ABOUT THAT 1-YEAR WAIT FOR THE DOCTOR: Sadly, the just released rules undermine a state’s ability to administer their program in the best way—helping the most kids get much needed health coverage. These problematic changes include the following:



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