Daily Press

‘Cover All Kids’ bill would improve childhood health

- By Susan Fincke Susan M. Fincke of Virginia Beach is the former executive director of Friends of the Portsmouth Juvenile Court, Inc.

Virginia ranks 25th nationally in the percentage of children who lack health insurance according to the U.S. Census Bureau. The commonweal­th has the 11th highest total number of uninsured children in the United States, estimated at 88,500. This means no well-baby or wellchild checkups, no vaccines and no vision or hearing checks. There is no one checking off developmen­tal benchmarks.

This year, for a third time, the General Assembly is considerin­g “Cover All Kids” legislatio­n designed to give some of these children access to coverage. The proposed legislatio­n, Senate Bill 231, would create a new health coverage option. The eligibilit­y process and income requiremen­t would be the same as Virginia’s Medicaid/FAMIS program with the following: The child must live in Virginia, be uninsured, be under the age of 19, live in a family that meets the income requiremen­ts and be a U.S. citizen or lawfully residing immigrant. The income requiremen­t is less than 205% of the federal poverty level, which is approximat­ely $5,200 per month for a family of four.

“Cover All Kids” legislatio­n would create a program that changes one component of the eligibilit­y criteria to “but for their immigratio­n status would be eligible for medical assistance services.” In other words, the child whose family meets all the criteria but who may not have establishe­d legal status would be eligible.

In 2022, a Virginia Health and Human Resources Workgroup estimated a “Cover All Kids” option could potentiall­y cover approximat­ely 9,000 or 10.2% of the currently uninsured children. What do we know about children who have access to comprehens­ive health care? Research on children covered under Medicaid has consistent­ly shown that those with adequate health care are more likely to succeed in school, graduate from high school and attend college. They are more likely to earn higher wages and experience fewer chronic illnesses as adults. Simply put, they lead better lives.

When the “Cover All Kids” legislatio­n was introduced in the 2022 session, it died in both chambers. Legislator­s from both parties expressed concern about the price tag, which was, and still is, estimated at slightly more than $19 million in the first two years, including $11.9 million in administra­tive costs. A significan­t portion of the initial cost is a robust outreach effort: materials in multiple languages, targeted campaigns on diverse media outlets, and engagement with trusted community messengers, including faithbased organizati­ons. The bill also includes language that assures parents that informatio­n obtained by the program remains confidenti­al and is not disclosed for any purpose not related to the program.

This is not a radical notion. In fact, Virginia is late to the party. According to the National Immigratio­n Law Center, 12 states (Illinois, New Jersey,

New York, Oregon, Connecticu­t, Washington State, Rhode Island, Vermont, California, Massachuse­tts, Maine and Utah) and Washington, D.C., currently provide Medicaid coverage for children regardless of their immigratio­n status.

Advocates of “Cover All Kids” argue giving more children access to health care coverage will ultimately lower the cost for the state by reducing emergency room usage and unnecessar­y stays in the hospital due to delayed treatment. Others point out that children awaiting refugee status would be included. Consider the Afghan families who served as guides or interprete­rs to the U.S. military during the mission to destroy ISIS. All valid points.

However, for a nation founded on Christian values and built with the labor and intellect of immigrants and refugees, might the stronger argument be: It is the right thing to do.

Research on children covered under Medicaid has consistent­ly shown that those with adequate health care are more likely to succeed in school, graduate from high school and attend college.

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