X

CHIP

  • Congress Should Build On What Works by Looking to CHIP & Medicaid in Health Reform

    By Joe Touschner “Fix what’s broken and build on what works.” It’s President Obama’s mantra for health reform.  It may be hard to see how Congress will accomplish that when so far we’ve only seen proposals that would eliminate (as we know it) a program that works well–CHIP–and move the children it covers to Medicaid…

  • Improving Enrollment and Retention in Medicaid and CHIP: Federal Options for a Changing Landscape

    With the new options in CHIPRA, a new Administration in Washington, and the potential for health care reform on the horizon, the time is right to highlight the most promising federal actions that would close these remaining coverage gaps for uninsured children and adults. This report identifies new strategies as well as some variations in…

  • The Future of CHIP – What if it Goes Away?

    By Jocelyn Guyer It is becoming increasingly clear that Congress may well dismantle the popular Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) as part of broader health reform. Children and their families have much to gain in health reform, as my colleagues and I have written about elsewhere, but this is a change worthy of its own…

  • House Energy and Commerce Committee Passes Health Reform Bill: Highlights for Children and Families

    Friday evening the Energy and Commerce Committee approved H.R. 3200, America’s Affordable Health Choices Act. The bill included the amendments and changes I described in my Friday post, including those designed to secure the votes of some of the “Blue Dog” Democrats on the committee without alienating progressive members. The House will now merge this…

  • House Energy and Commerce Committee Passes Health Reform Bill: Highlights for Children and Families

    This week there was a lot of back-and-forth on health reform as both the House and Senate attempted to get a bill to the floor before the now infamous August recess (which for those of you not up on the Congressional calendar is August 1st to September 8th in the House and August 10th to…

  • Where are the Parents in Health Reform?

    By Martha Heberlein These are uncertain times for children and their families – the threat of job and health insurance losses haunt many. Health reform could provide the peace of mind families need, but it is important to keep in mind that children are just one piece of the family puzzle. Parents must not be…

  • More than a Dozen States are Moving Forward On Children’s Health Coverage, As California Moves Backward on Covering Uninsured Children, Update

    By Jocelyn Guyer A quick addendum… It has been only a few hours since we posted our statement on California’s decision to shut down new enrollment into its Children’s Health Insurance Program even as most states have found ways to maintain or even strengthen their coverage of children.  In the interim, some more bad news…

  • More than a Dozen States are Moving Forward On Children’s Health Coverage, As California Moves Backward on Covering Uninsured Children

    By Jocelyn Guyer During tough budget times, most states have maintained their commitment to covering uninsured children. At least eighteen states have even further strengthened coverage for uninsured children, despite budget problems, as the recession has increased the need. While many states have prioritized covering uninsured children, California lawmakers voted to deny coverage to nearly…

  • House Tri-Committee Health Reform Bill

    It was another eventful week for health reform. You only have to turn on CNN or read the blogs for the political ins and outs. On perhaps the less sexy side of things, we have been busy reading the House’s new 1,018 page health reform bill, the America’s Affordable Health Choices Act of 2009. The…

  • An Update on Health Reform and Kids

    By Joe Touschner This week has been a reminder of both the promise and peril of health reform–we have seen real progress but also real signs that the whole initiative could falter. Health reform legislation passed two committees in the House–Ways and Means and Education and Labor, but there remains serious doubt about whether it…

  • Even in tough times, states can do the right thing for kids.

    Jill Beckwith and Jessica Mack, Policy Analysts, Rhode Island Kids Count Rhode Island has been a leader in making sure that children have health insurance, with 94% of our kids covered. Most are covered through employer-sponsored insurance, and about one-third through RIte Care, our state’s Medicaid managed care program for children and families. Like so…

  • An Overview of the CHIPRA Outreach and Enrollment Grants

    On July 6, 2009, HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius and Medicaid Director Cindy Mann announced a request for a first round of outreach grant proposals funded through CHIPRA. This brief provides an overview of the grants and the requirements for applicants. This brief is part of a series that puts a spotlight on specific provisions of…

  • HHS Announces Long-awaited Request for Outreach Grant Proposals

    Yesterday HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius and Medicaid Director Cindy Mann announced the department’s “Request for Proposals (RFP)” for a first round of outreach grants funded through CHIP reauthorization. Find more information here about this long awaited announcement. It’s encouraging that in the RFP the department has embraced a more appropriate definition of outreach which is…

  • The Tri-Committee Health Reform Bill: Implications for Children

    By Jocelyn Guyer On Friday, almost two weeks ago now, the three major committees in the House with jurisdiction over health reform put out a draft legislative proposal, known as “The Tri-Committee bill.”  We’ve now read the 852-page document a few times, and think it would make giant strides in providing access to coverage to…

  • Cost Sharing – What is Affordable in Health Reform?

    By Martha Heberlein As the health reform debate continues to ramp up, questions of what is affordable and how much families should contribute still remain. Perhaps a look at the research could shed some light on the answers. A recent study in Health Affairs by Tom Selden, Jenny Kenney, and colleagues looks at cost sharing…

  • The Week in Health Reform – Hitting a Speed Bump

    By Jocelyn Guyer Health reform didn’t go very well this week and everyone already knows it. Since it is well-covered territory, I’ll leave the depressing details to others, and stick to what this week’s developments mean for children. Leaving aside for now the just-released and yet-to-be-read 852-page House bill on health reform, the most notable…

  • $6 Billion for CHIP – the Allotments are In!

    By Martha Heberlein The long-awaited (at least by us) fiscal year 2009 “CHIPRA allotments” were released today.  They reveal, in final form, the new federal funding available to each state for its Child Health Insurance Program (CHIP) in fiscal year 2009.  As we anticipated based on earlier projections, each and every state will experience a…

  • The Health Care Game of Chance: A Tale of Two Families

    Some of you may have been listening to the Senate HELP Committee hearings this week on its health reform proposal, the Affordable Health Choices Act. There was a lot of talking going on, making it hard at times to see “the forest through the trees.” But Senator Dodd’s opening statement provided some clarity when he…

  • Affordable Healthy Choices Act – Implications for Kids in the Health Reform Bill

    By Jocelyn Guyer Last week, the Senate HELP Committee publicly released the first, major bill outlining its proposal for health reform, the Affordable Health Choices Act.  It is easy when reading any bill — especially a 615-page one that you are reading at 5:00 a.m. to avoid being distracted by e-mail, phone calls, and kids…

  • The Numbers Are In: Could Some Children End Up Worse Off After Health Reform?

    By Jocelyn Guyer We’ve finally got a glimpse at how the all-important Congressional Budget Office is thinking about evaluating the cost of the major health reform proposals under consideration in Congress. CBO today released a preliminary analysis and blog entry on the estimated impact of Senator Kennedy’s Affordable Health Choices Act. Unfortunately, the results are…