Florida News Connection
February 16, 2023
By: Trimmel Gomes
As federal pandemic health emergency protections
are set to expire starting in April, child advocates are concerned the program
that kept Florida's uninsured children stable will result in a sharp rise in
children and families becoming uninsured.
A new
report by the Georgetown University Center for Children and
Families showed how Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program
brought down the child uninsured rate across the country and stabilized it in
Florida, but it is now in jeopardy.
Alison Yager, executive director of the Florida Health Justice Project, said if
protections are lifted, she is concerned children who may no longer be Medicaid
eligible, but should be through the state CHIP program, KidCare, will not see a
smooth transition and cause a gap in care.
"For kids who have ongoing medical conditions, even one month without
coverage could be terribly detrimental to that child's health and to that
family's finances," Yager pointed out.
The report showed Florida's program was a critical lifeline for more than 65.7%
of the state's children during the COVID-19 pandemic. Children younger than
five receive 12-month continuous eligibility while those ages five and older
receive six months of continuous eligibility.
Yager urged health officials to prepare for the potential coverage gap and find
solutions, including streamlining both health insurance programs.
Joan Alker, executive director of the Georgetown University Center for Children
and Families and the report's author, said states such as Florida which have
not expanded Medicaid for adults under the Affordable Care Act, are more
vulnerable for putting children at risk, since the majority of their enrollment
growth during the pandemic has been children.
"So, states like Florida, Georgia and Texas that don't cover a lot of
adults in their program, this is really who we're talking about; children, very
poor parents, and new moms," Alker outlined.
The report noted enrollment in Florida's Medicaid and CHIP program grew by
32.6% from February 2020 to August 2022. Florida's children made up 48.2% of
the growth, much higher than the 32% growth nationally.
Millions of people are expected to lose Medicaid coverage during what some are
calling the "unwinding" process. The report lists two reasons for it:
Either an individual's income has risen and they are no longer eligible, or red
tape and communication barriers in states prevent families from renewing
coverage if eligible before April.
Content for this Post is provided by Florida News
Connection, a Bureau of Public News Service.
Public News Service is a member of the The Trust Project.
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