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San Jose
Mercury News
Sunday, June 23, 2002
Universal
Health Care for Kids Gains Momentum
Bay Area Efforts Inspire Other
Countries
to Offer Coverage
By
Karen de Sá
A movement to provide universal health care for children is
expanding from the Bay Area to other parts of California, even
as
state and federal support for the uninsured gets scaled back
to
solve budget woes.
Inspired by Santa Clara County's startling success - enrolling
children in health plans at twice the expected rate - San Francisco,
in just five months, now has a success story of its own. And
San
Mateo County has pledged funding for a health care plan scheduled
to begin covering kids in January. In Alameda County, a managed
care plan has served 3,000 uninsured children since its July
2000
inception.
Contra Costa, Orange and Riverside counties are creating plans
to
insure all children by year's end, according to the non-profit
Institute
for Health Policy Solutions, which is tracking such plans. Still
more
counties are in the discussion stage, including Sacramento,
Solano,
Sonoma, San Joaquin, San Diego and San Bernardino.
Los Angeles County begins funding discussions this summer.
The growing number of newly insured kids are a fraction of
the 1.6
million uninsured statewide, but they offer hope for a solution
to a
long-entrenched problem.
"We are limited only by our imaginations; it could go
statewide within
a year,'' said Jean Fraser, chief executive officer of San Francisco's
health plan. "And it's incredibly critical, with the funding
cuts, that
we do something.''
San Francisco recently enrolled its 1,000th child, 12-year-old
Emilie.
Her mom, Mireya Gonzalez, works as a teacher's aide and home
health care worker. Almost one-quarter of her $3,300 monthly
gross
salary was spent on Emilie's treatment for a rare genetic disorder
before she got coverage through the new San Francisco plan.
Emilie's older sister has the same disorder but did not receive
treatment. At 23, she suffers from severe mental retardation.
"It's a relief to know that my kids are going to be covered
regardless,''
Gonzalez said. "And I don't have to think about what if
Emilie has an
emergency, how am I going to pay for it? I have peace of mind.''
Uninsured at a price
Children without health coverage have a death rate 150 percent
higher than insured children. Their schoolwork suffers because
easily preventable illnesses keep them at home, and they infect
other students when they go to school. Emergency rooms treat
them at wildly more expensive rates to taxpayers than a typical
doctor's visit would cost.
Gov. Gray Davis' budget proposal uses cuts in health services
to
fill a large part of the state's $23.6 billion shortfall, including
eliminating 300,000 working parents from state-funded health
benefits and reducing children's dental checkups from twice
to
once a year. Plans to expand state-funded health care to working
poor families are being suspended.
These possibilities have given local efforts even more incentive
to
cover children - with or without the state. County-level initiatives
rely on a combination of funds, from tobacco settlements and
cigarette taxes to general fund dollars matched by private donations.
"A current notion says that we all must share in the pain
of the
budget crisis, '' San Mateo County Supervisor Jerry Hill said
recently, announcing a $7.7 million initiative. "The children
of San
Mateo County shouldn't have to share that pain. We'll do all
we can
to see that they don't.''
All children included
Most local initiatives include stepped-up recruitment for existing
health care programs for the low-income: Medi-Cal and California's
Healthy Families. Children living in households with incomes
too
high for these programs, but too low to afford health care on
their
own, are being enrolled in new plans, commonly called Healthy
Kids.
County-run HMOs make enrollment quick and easy with simplified
forms and outreach efforts to schools, clinics and community
centers. Parents do not have to understand all of the various
programs and which ones they are eligible for to get signed
up.
And they don't have to prove legal residency, eliminating much
of
the fear that often keeps foreign-born residents from seeking
help
for their children.
Using this approach, the Santa Clara County Children's Health
Initiative has insured 30,000 of the county's 72,000 uninsured
children since January 2001 - double the original goal. Almost
10,000 of these children are enrolled in Healthy Kids, which
covers households with incomes up to 300 percent of the federal
poverty level - or $54,300 per year for a family of four.
Staying healthy
Kinh Morfin's two children, Carlos, 7, and William, 4, got
signed
up a year ago. Morfin works in a bakery decorating cakes to
support her family in San Jose, but she can't afford market-rate
health care plans.
It makes it harder that William falls down a lot and has had
repeated neurological exams as a result. "Thank God he's
OK,
but if you don't have insurance, you cannot cover these tests,''
she said.
San Francisco is reaching out to families like Morfin's as
well,
enrolling 25 percent of its target population in five months.
The county began enrollment in January with 269 children and,
as of this month, had 1,245 children covered. Their parents
pay
$4 per child, per month, for the coverage.
The momentum to provide universal health coverage for children
is driven in part by ethics. But there are also bottom-line
considerations, said Liane Wong, policy director for the Institute
for Health Policy Solutions, based in Washington, D.C.
"It doesn't take a whole lot of money for counties to
cover these
kids relative to the cost of them going into the emergency
rooms,'' she said.
Other states join act
The Bay Area is quickly becoming the first region in California
offering universal health care for children, according to the
non-profit Insure the Uninsured Project in Santa Monica. The
movement already exists in other states, including Washington,
Oregon, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New York and Rhode Island.
Bay Area counties shared their challenges and successes at
a
recent Burlingame health summit. "From the get-go, we said
we
are covering all kids,'' said Leona Butler, chief executive
officer of
the Santa Clara County health plan. "We didn't care whether
they
had a green card, a blue card or whatever color card - a kid
is
a kid.''
The county went on to set "an audacious start-date,''
she said, and
used outreach workers whom the families could trust - Spanish
and Vietnamese speakers among them.
Butler acknowledged the difficulty of launching new initiatives
for the
working poor, as California stumbles out of recession and counties
face sweeping cuts in state funding to administer social service
programs.
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Contact Karen de Sá at kdesa@sjmercury.com
or (650) 366-0174.
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