Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Children’s program eyes future

Congressio­nal funding date looms

- DAN HOLTMEYER

SPRINGDALE — Congress must quickly reauthoriz­e a federal program that covers health care costs for tens of thousands of Arkansas children, advocates said Monday.

The 20-year-old Children’s Health Insurance Program’s budget is approved only until the end of this month unless the Senate and House agree to extend it. The program helped pay for primary, dental and mental care for around 121,000 children in fiscal 2016, according to the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and is credited for driving down the uninsured rate among children.

The program would limp on for a few months without the needed renewal as states spend the last of the money, but legislator­s are heading into the year’s final weeks of work with several issues to deal with. Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families held a policy forum Monday evening to urge legislator­s not to let the insurance program get lost in the shuffle.

“We don’t want to gamble with this in any way,” said Laura Kellams, Arkansas Advocates’ Northwest Arkansas director. The group aims to encourage policies promoting children’s welfare in areas like education, foster care and health.

The health insurance program began with bipartisan support and is intertwine­d with a similar state effort called ARKids First, which then-Gov. Mike Huckabee signed into law.

Since then, the uninsured rate among children in Arkansas has fallen from around 20 percent to less than 5 percent, according to census estimates.

ARKids works in two tracks. One essentiall­y provides Medicaid to children who qualify and includes hundreds of thousands of children, and it isn’t affected by this particular deadline. The other provides the same types of care for families who make up to about twice the federal poverty level and has them kick in a small amount, such as $10 per doctor visit.

The federal government covered all of the cost of the second part, or almost $200 million expected for this year, Marquita Little, health policy director for Arkansas Advocates.

Without this second coverage program, “what we’d see is just many, many less people coming for care,” Dr. Eddie Ochoa, a pediatrici­an with the Arkansas Children’s Hospital and University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences systems, said at the forum. Any gap in coverage can mean health needs go unseen longer, distract kids from school or cause other problems, he and Kellams said.

Little said the state would need to decide whether to take on the burden itself, provide the program in some smaller way or cut it altogether.

“Are we going to cover fewer kids? Are we going to cover fewer people with disabiliti­es? Or are we going to pay physicians less?” she said.

The Children’s Health Insurance Program still enjoys bipartisan support. Sen. Orrin Hatch, a prominent

Republican from Utah who co-authored the original bill creating the program, said last week he’d support authorizin­g it for another five years, according to the Washington Examiner. Rep. Steve Womack, a Republican from Rogers, last month called its renewal a priority.

State officials in both parties also hope to allow Marshall Islander children, thousands of whom live in Northwest Arkansas, to join ARKids if they qualify. The request to the federal government for the change is pending but could come before the end of the year.

The biggest risk is lack of time, Womack said in an August interview. Congress is trying to put together a budget for the entire government, one that’s sure to come with disagreeme­nts between and within the two major parties. Proposals to change the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare, are also

floating around after consuming months of debate this year.

“It’s very important to me, but it’s not the only thing I’m working on,” Womack, a member of the House’s appropriat­ions committee, said of the children’s program.

Still, some oppose the program or would see it reduced; President Donald Trump’s budget proposal included cuts to it as part of an overall goal to reduce non-defense spending. Kellams urged several dozen forum attendees to contact their representa­tives.

 ??  ?? CONNECT WITH US ON FACEBOOK Share your thoughts on this and other stories at facebook. com/nwademgaz
CONNECT WITH US ON FACEBOOK Share your thoughts on this and other stories at facebook. com/nwademgaz

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States