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Say Ahhh!

  • What’s next for CHIP?

    With both the House and Senate committees of jurisdiction reporting out CHIP bills last week, what needs to happen next to get CHIP done? Students of Schoolhouse Rock know that it’s very difficult for a bill to become a law – there are many steps that have to be taken. And while it’s a good…

  • New Executive Order: Expanding Access to Short-Term Health Plans Is Bad for Consumers and the Individual Market

    On October 12, 2017, President Trump signed a “very major” executive order related to health care that is “going to cover a lot of territory.” The executive order takes steps to roll back a consumer protection related to short-term health plans, in addition to allowing the sale of association health plans that are unregulated by the states and do…

  • Trump’s Executive Order: Can Association Health Plans Accomplish What Congress Could Not?

    Within days of the failure of the Graham-Cassidy legislation to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act (ACA), President Trump announced that he would likely sign an executive order to allow individuals and small employers to purchase health insurance across state lines through associations. Senator Rand Paul (R–Ky.), among others, has pushed the idea that the Trump administration can accomplish by…

  • New Report Documents Growing Role CHIP Plays in Lives of Kids Across NY State, Underscores Need to Continue Funding  

    The September 30 expiration of federal CHIP funding puts the New York program, Child Health Plus (CHP) in a precarious situation. Data from the new UHF HealthWatch brief, The Curve Bends Back Up, Sharply, suggests that CHP is growing in its importance – which means insurance coverage is at risk for more New York children…

  • CHIP is Moving Ahead But Will Congress Get to the Finish Line in Time?

    Late last night House Republicans released text of their bill (the Healthy Kids Act) to extend funding for the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), and they are proceeding rapidly to mark up tomorrow in the Energy and Commerce Committee. The Senate Finance Committee is also marking up their bill, the KIDS Act, tomorrow. The very…

  • The Medicaid Expansion is Good for Parents AND Good for Children

    Parents and children are more likely to have health coverage now than they were before the Affordable Care Act took effect. The Urban Institute released new research that shows the rate of insurance coverage for parents and children increased significantly between June/September 2013 and March 2017. During the time period, the rate of coverage increased…

  • Governor LePage’s Medicaid Proposal Would Harm Low-Income Mainers

    Governor Paul LePage’s proposal for harsh changes in the state’s Medicaid program, known as MaineCare, would restrict access to health care for many low-income Mainers. Maine is one of 19 states that haven’t adopted the Affordable Care Act’s (ACA’s) Medicaid expansion, leaving most poor adults without a coverage option. The governor’s proposal would make it…

  • Who Are the Uninsured Adults?

    Last week we posted a piece about the shrinking pool of uninsured adults, based on a Health Affairs study showing that the rate of adults without insurance dropped from 16 percent to 7 percent in states that took the Affordable Care Act’s Medicaid expansion. Hidden at the end of this Health Affairs study, is a…

  • Cutting Medicaid Unpopular Among Republicans, Democrats and Independents

    I’ve written before about how popular the Medicaid program has become and how firmly opposed the public is to cutting Medicaid. One unanticipated outcome of the last two months of debate on in Congress around bills that would have cut Medicaid substantially in the process of “repealing” the Affordable Care Act has been the willingness…

  • Graham-Cassidy: A Triple Whammy for Children and Families

    When Senators Graham (R-SC) and Cassidy (R-LA) released their proposal to “repeal and replace” the ACA, we had our doubts about just how helpful it would be for children and families, but wanted to wait for the official word from CBO. Now we know.  CBO has issued a “Preliminary Analysis” that leaves no doubt that…

  • Medicaid Expansion Enrollees Drive Down the Uninsured Rate, Cost Less to Cover

    The Medicaid expansion has been particularly successful at covering uninsured adults. According to new research in Health Affairs that used data from the Health Reform Monitoring Survey, expansion states saw a decrease in their rate of uninsured adults from about 16% during the third quarter of 2013 to 7% in the first quarter of 2017.…

  • States Say They Will Run Out of CHIP Funds Faster than Projected; Will Congress Act in Time?

    Ten states project they will run out of CHIP funds before the end of 2017 according to a new brief released by the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF), based on responses from 42 states during the KFF’s annual Medicaid budget survey. The ten states are: Arizona, California, Connecticut, Hawaii, Idaho, Mississippi, Nevada, Oregon, Pennsylvania and Utah.…

  • Stability of Children’s Coverage Threatened if Congress Doesn’t Act by Saturday

    As readers of SayAhhh! already know, the maintenance of effort (MOE) provision in the Affordable Care Act has been one of the key policies to help bring the uninsured rate for kids down to historic lows – 95.5% of children had health insurance in 2016. This decline is largely attributable to Medicaid, CHIP, and the…

  • Florida Makes Significant Progress on Children’s Health Coverage But It is at Risk

    Our latest brief looks how Florida has cut its rate of uninsured children by more than half since 2009. The rate dropped from 14.8 percent to 6.2 percent in 2016, an all-time low. In raw numbers, that means the state went from having 601,000 uninsured kids to 257,000. Much of that progress can be attributed…

  • Graham-Cassidy Would Unravel Innovative and Smart Investments in Young Children

    As we celebrate the good news of the highest health coverage levels on record for children, the latest ACA repeal effort in Congress once again threatens to destabilize the foundation of coverage for our nation’s children. We’ve written before about the ways that structural changes to Medicaid through block grants or caps will harm young…

  • The Medicaid Cap: Still a Terrible Idea for Children and Families

    The Senate Majority Leader has announced his intention to take up the Graham-Cassidy proposal next week.  The proposal has lots of moving parts.  None of them are kid- or family-friendly. And one of them—the cap on federal Medicaid payments to states—is not only very unfriendly, but it will last forever. The cap first emerged in…

  • Graham-Cassidy’s Waiver Program Allows States to Erase Protections for People with Pre-existing Conditions

    By Justin Giovannelli, Sabrina Corlette, Kevin Lucia and JoAnn Volk Legislation introduced last week by Republican Senators Lindsey Graham (SC) and Bill Cassidy (LA) goes about the task of repealing and replacing the Affordable Care Act (ACA) somewhat differently than the bills previously taken up by the House and Senate, but its approach is no…

  • CHIP Benefit Standards Won’t Protect Consumers in Graham-Cassidy Plan

    Listening to the sponsors of Graham-Cassidy suggests that coverage for low-income individuals will be based on CHIP benefit standards and, of course, everyone loves CHIP, right? In fact, the proposed legislation does NOT ensure that Marketplace and Medicaid expansion enrollees will get benefits that are equivalent to CHIP in a given state. Nor does it…

  • Children Would Fall Through Cracks if Graham-Cassidy Becomes Law

    There’s much ado in the news today about what the “Graham-Cassidy” plan does with respect to CHIP. Two impacts of Graham-Cassidy on CHIP are very clear. First, by cutting Medicaid, Graham-Cassidy would undermine the foundation upon which CHIP sits. Medicaid covers four times as many children as CHIP, so cutting Medicaid by imposing a per-capita…

  • Jimmy Kimmel Calls Out Graham-Cassidy for Failing to Protect Kids with Pre-Existing Conditions

    It’s déjà vu in D.C. as the Senate tries again to pass a ACA repeal and gut Medicaid through Graham-Cassidy—a bill that’s arguably worse for kids, families, and states than previous attempts. Even as many have tired of the whiplash, it cannot be understated that this new threat is as serious as those over the…