Apria Home
ChannelsResourcesServicesInsuranceBranch LocatorAbout ApriaCareersHelp
 resources
Community
Health Advisors
Patient Education
Other Sources
Glossaries
Product Manuals
FAQS
News
Electronic CMN
  Search Apria articles:
 
     
 Channels
Cancer
Caregivers
Degenerative Conditions
Diabetes
Heart
Infectious Diseases
Pediatrics
Respiratory
Seniors
Sleep Disorders
 
 
   
  Increase Font Size Decrease Font Size Printer Friendly
 
  CHIP on chopping block again?
  Kate Long
 
 

Nov. 4--CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- For the second time in a month, 14 million children in the Children's Health Insurance Program, including at least 25,000 West Virginia kids, are slated to be shifted into private insurance plans that are not required to provide equal benefits.

The House of Representatives health-care reform plan would dismantle CHIP in 2013 and move most of the children into commercial insurance plans.

In early October, Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., squelched a similar proposal in the Senate health reform bill. He successfully amended the Senate bill to preserve CHIP until 2019.

It would cost $15 billion more to serve the children with private insurance, according to the Congressional Budget Office. "I simply don't think there's any reason to pay $15 billion to dismantle a program that works and transfer millions of children into an uncertain, risky situation," Rockefeller said.

Congresswoman Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., said Tuesday, "The fact that the House bill essentially dumps CHIP is yet another example of pieces of this bill that just don't add up."

Capito has supported the CHIP program since she was in the state Legislature, she said. "The fact that [the health reform bill] takes aim at a popular program that we know is effective only further demonstrates that this bill isn't ready for prime time."

Rockefeller will be one of the conferees who merge the Senate and House bills into a final package if both houses pass bills, he said Tuesday, and CHIP will be one of his top priorities. "These are children -- we should do all we can to shield them from harm. Period," he said.

If the children were moved to private insurance, their parents would also pay significantly more in premiums and out-of-pocket expense, according to an actuarial study by financial consulting firm Watson Wyatt Worldwide.

Using data from 17 states, researchers found that, at 175 to 225 percent of poverty, parents of CHIP children paid up to 2 percent of their child's treatment. If the same children were transferred to private plans, their parents would pay between 5 and 35 percent of the cost of care.

"Most of these parents are working people who are counting dollars," said Renate Pore, health care analyst for the West Virginia Center on Budget and Policy. Families eligible for CHIP make too much to be eligible for Medicaid, but not enough to afford private insurance, she said.

"CHIP is the stronger coverage package, and we are very concerned about the idea that those kids would be moved over without some protection," said Bruce Lesley, director of First Focus, the national child advocacy group that commissioned the actuarial study.

The CHIP program includes developmental screening and preventative care that is not covered by most adult plans. It covers a wide range of services, including doctor and hospital visits, immunizations and prescriptions, tests and X-rays, diabetic care, and dental and vision care. It provides case management for children with special needs.

"There are many wonderful parts of the reform legislation, and many things in health care that need to be changed," Lesley said, "but this is one that should be left alone."

Reach Kate Long at katelong@wvgazette.com or (304) 348-1798.

-----

To see more of The Charleston Gazette, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.wvgazette.com.

Copyright (c) 2009, The Charleston Gazette, W.Va.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

For reprints, email tmsreprints@permissionsgroup.com, call 800-374-7985 or 847-635-6550, send a fax to 847-635-6968, or write to The Permissions Group Inc., 1247 Milwaukee Ave., Suite 303, Glenview, IL 60025, USA.

NYSE:WW,

 
 
 
 
 
Contact Us | Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy | HIPAA Privacy Notice
 
2009 Apria Healthcare All Rights Reserved.
No duplication of any material herein is authorized without the express consent of Apria Healthcare, Inc.
Please review the Terms and Conditions of this Web site.