XBluesky

2010

  • Study Concludes That Medicaid Retention Among Children Has Improved

    One of the many lessons learned about advancing children’s health coverage is how critical retention in Medicaid and CHIP is to our coverage goals. Dr. Benjamin Sommers drove this point home in a study that concluded that one-third of all eligible, uninsured children in 2006 had actually been enrolled in Medicaid or CHIP in the prior…

  • Moms Rising, Fran Drescher & HHS Discuss Preventive Care Provisions of Affordable Care Act

    Moms Rising members had an opportunity to ask Secretary Sebelius questions about the Affordable Care Act (ACA) during a recent webchat hosted by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.  Actress Fran Drescher, founder of Cancer Schmancer, joined the conversation and spoke about how the ACA’s preventive care provisions and insurance reforms will help…

  • Medicaid and Medicare Turn 45 Today

      Is this a scene from the latest Mad Men episode?  While it’s from the same era, it’s fairly apparent from the attire that the photo was not taken on Madison Avenue.  The photo was taken 45 years ago today at the signing ceremony of the Social Security Act of 1965, the law that created…

  • $51 Million Available for Designing State Exchanges

    By Martha Heberlein HHS announced today that up to $1 million per state will be available in grants to begin establishing health insurance exchanges. This first round of grants is designed to help cash-strapped states conduct the research and planning necessary to build the new marketplaces. Grant applications are available at: http://www.healthcare.gov/center/grants and are due…

  • Consumer Assistance: A Guided Tour to Your New Health Care Choices

    By Christine Barber, Community Catalyst We’ve all heard the recently-passed Affordable Care Act (ACA) provides a lot of new opportunities for improving health care coverage and access – but we also hear most Americans don’t understand what the law actually means for them. At Community Catalyst, we think a major opportunity created by national health…

  • Bumps in the Road for Kids’ Coverage

    By Sabrina Corlette, Georgetown Health Policy Institute In the last couple of weeks there have been reports that some insurance companies have decided they will no longer market “kids-only” policies, in response to the new requirement under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) that they issue coverage to all children, even those with pre-existing…

  • Covering Kids and Families Network Shares Tips on Back-to-School Enrollment Efforts; CMS to Host Follow-up Webinar Thursday

    Summer vacation is not even half over and I’m already thinking about getting my kids ready to go back-to school.  It’s not that I don’t enjoy their company; I just want to get a jump-start on my to-do list so that I deliver them to school ready to learn.  Along with back-to-school shopping, they need…

  • Insurance Commissioners Meet on Exchanges: Medicaid and CHIP

    Last week, the National Association of Insurance Commissioners held a first of many planned meetings on health care reform.  In many ways, state insurance commissioners, have become the front lines of health reform implementation as they are responsible for ensuring that health plans are compliant with the insurance reforms in the Affordable Care Act and they…

  • Wisconsin Shows How States Can Mitigate the Downside of New Puerto Rico Law

    By Jon Peacock, Wisconsin Council on Children and Families It isn’t often that state policymakers have to make program changes and policy choices because of a law passed in another state or territory of the U.S.  Thus, it came as a big surprise to learn that a law enacted in Puerto Rico forces states to…

  • Advocates Can Guide and Support Efforts to Advance Children’s Coverage: Reports Show How

    By Eugene Lewit and Liane Wong The David and Lucile Packard Foundation The percent of uninsured children has consistently declined, despite deterioration of coverage for adults and the economy. This is one of the significant but frequently overlooked good news stories of recent years. The gains in children’s coverage have been due in large part to…

  • CCF Comments to NAIC on Exchange Coordination with Medicaid and CHIP

    CCF Comments to NAIC on Exchange Coordination with Medicaid and CHIP

  • States will Face Tough Choices Without Extended Medicaid Funding

    By Joe Touschner As we’ve noted previously Congress has yet to reach agreement on extending the increased Medicaid funding it originally granted in the 2009 economic recovery legislation.  The increased payments are scheduled to end in December 2010, but most state budgets are looking no better than they were a year and a half ago. …

  • What will this cost us – continued…

    By Martha Heberlein Since the last time we talked about state estimates of the cost of health reform, several more have put them out. A few, in particular, struck me – Maine, Maryland, and Wisconsin. Why, you might ask? Because these three states found that health reform would save them money. John Holahan of the Urban…

  • HHS Rule on Preventive Services: Bright Futures For All Children

    By Judith S. Palfrey, MD, FAAP President, American Academy of Pediatrics On Wednesday, I was honored to attend an event in DC unveiling the US Department of Health and Human Services’ (HHS) Interim Final Rule on preventive services under health reform. To so many of us in the business of taking care of children, the…

  • New Reg Aims to Make Preventive Health Services More Accessible, Affordable

    “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.” It is not often that I find myself quoting Benjamin Franklin, but it seems particularly apropos this week with the release of the latest Affordable Care Act regulation. On Wednesday, the Obama administration issued new rules requiring that health plans provide a series of expert-recommended preventive…

  • The Doctor Is In

    Doctor Donald M. Berwick, a respected Harvard professor and pediatrician who has built a reputation for improving quality and reducing health care costs, was sworn in this week as administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.  The agency had been without a permanent administrator since 2006.  Dr. Berwick was installed in the CMS…

  • Governors Make the Case for Help with FMAP

    This last weekend, the nation’s Governors came together for their annual meeting in Boston where the main topic of conversation was the economic crisis that continues to cripple state budgets.  One of the key policies many of the Governors made a pitch for was an extension of fiscal relief for strapped states through the extension of…

  • A Deeper Look at Individual Responsibility Requirement

    By Jocelyn Guyer Community Catalyst and Georgetown’s CCF have just finished up a piece that explores in detail the way that the new individual responsibility requirement will work.  With all of the controversy and rhetoric surrounding the requirement, it seemed a good time to take an objective, detailed look at how it will actually work. …

  • The New Responsibility to Secure Coverage: Frequently Asked Questions

    The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) includes a much-discussed requirement that people secure health insurance coverage for themselves and their children. This “individual responsibility requirement” is an essential element of the new law, which will play a vital role in increasing the number of people with health insurance and make it possible to…

  • Many Children Lose Insurance When Parents Lose Jobs

    By Jocelyn Guyer Dr. Fairbrother and her colleagues at Cincinnati Children’s hospital have just come out with an excellent new study that takes a clear-eyed look at how often children end up losing health coverage after a parent loses a job.  The results are powerful, but not pretty — between 2000 and 2004, almost one…