WAG THE KIDS

Goldberg, Robert

WAG THE KIDS by Robert Goldberg BEFORE AL GORE became the father of the Internet, he invented a toll-free number for enrolling children in government-provided health insurance. Last month, at a...

...Why not make a credit or voucher available to those who need it to buy insurance, pay bills, or add children to their own coverage...
...Instead of trying to drag parents into Medicaid and Kidcare, why not simply give them the money to make their own choices...
...Chances are it won't even come close...
...The Health Care Financing Administration now puts the figure at 4.7 million...
...BUT PARENTS MAY HAVE GOOD REASON NOT TO GET KIDCARE...
...The situation was dire, justifying an expenditure of $40 billion over five years...
...The problem is, since Kidcare was enacted, fewer than 500,000 children have enrolled...
...The Medicaid population did not increase by more than 50 percent in two years...
...A recent study by the National Bureau of Economic Research actually found that uninsured kids tended to be healthier than kids covered by Medicaid regardless of income or race...
...Robert Goldberg is a senior research fellow in the Program on Medical Science and Society at the Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington, D.C...
...But parents may be passing up Kidcare because their children are generally healthy and they don't believe government-provided health insurance will make much difference...
...The kids this initiative seeks to help simply do not exist...
...Data from the National Health Interview Survey conducted by the Department of Health and Human Services show that even among families with incomes of $10,000 a year or less, 97 percent of children get all the care they need...
...The current outreach effort is supposed to crank up enrollment, but that is wishful thinking...
...The fact is, Kidcare enrollment is going nowhere...
...Back when the program was first proposed, the administration and the Children's Defense Fund claimed that 10 million children in America had no health insurance...
...Nancy-Ann Min DeParle, the director of the Health Care Financing Administration, which releases federal funds to states once their Kidcare plans are approved in Washington, testified recently that the program was well on its way to the 5 million goal...
...The administration and its allies overstated the number of children who were uninsured and at risk...
...And even that figure—about 2.5 million—was padded with children already enrolled in state health-insurance plans newly brought under the Kidcare umbrella...
...Even intensive door-to-door campaigns have failed to turn up more children...
...To some people, it is incomprehensible that anyone would pass up an entitlement...
...But Gore shouldn't wait for the phone to ring...
...What's more, those parents may be right...
...To drive the point home, the administration released a state-by-state breakdown of the number of kids who needed health care, and the White House vowed to sign up 5 million of them by 2000...
...Of the 40 state plans approved so far, only 11 are entirely new, 20 are Medicaid expansions, and 9 combine new programs with Medicaid...
...According to the New York Daily News, New York state's program has grown by barely 20,000 children since Kidcare funding kicked in, though advocates had claimed there was a large unmet need...
...Now the administration, desperate to reach a higher figure, has launched a $1 billion "outreach" effort to sign up more kids— whence the toll-free-number gimmick...
...The rest are covered by health insurance most of the time...
...Despite his warning in 1996 that a child health care crisis of historic proportions was threatening our children's very lives, the response to Kidcare has been underwhelming...
...And their experience is chastening...
...Strangely enough, there is no evidence that either Medicaid or private insurance makes kids healthier...
...Advocates claim it's too early to tell how well the program will work...
...Indeed from the outset, both the Children's Defense Fund and the White House have pushed states to expand Medicaid eligibility rather than create new stand-alone programs providing private coverage...
...They use private organizations like foundations, children's advocacy groups, health care providers, and businesses to educate parents and enroll children...
...The 5 million target was supposed to give Gore an accomplishment to tout in his presidential run...
...Rather, it means that most kids are healthy to begin with and that their parents often prefer to obtain what care they need outside entitlement programs—at public-health clinics, for example, or from providers paid for out of pocket...
...But Min DeParle wasn't convincing...
...Notably, low-income black and Hispanic children had more illness after they started using Medicaid than before...
...succeeded about as well as doing nothing in persuading parents to avail themselves of free well-child screenings...
...Why not just cut taxes...
...She failed to provide Congress the total number of children enrolled to date, offering instead "unreviewed" estimates of enrollment upon full implementation of the program...
...The hope is that it will be faster and easier to enroll kids in Medicaid than to get new Kidcare programs up and running...
...State Medicaid programs, whose funding rises with enrollment, already actively recruit participants...
...There never was a real children's health crisis, just a political benefit from talking about one...
...Pamphlets, phone calls, and home visits by nurses have TO SOME, IT IS INCOMPREHENSIBLE THATANYONE WOULD PASS UP AN ENTITLEMENT...
...No wonder the administration wants to count new Medicaid enrollees toward its 5 million target...
...Two years ago, the White House said 3 million eligible children were not signed up for Medicaid...
...Less than 4 percent of children under 18 (about 1.2 million) lack coverage for more than a year...
...But here, too, it fudges the numbers for political purposes...
...Last month, at a press conference with the first lady, the vice president unveiled the number, which parents can call to get information on Medicaid and Kidcare, the child health-insurance entitlement that began in 1997...
...Less than 2 percent cite lack of money or insurance as a reason for not getting care...
...Rather, the administration reclassified a portion of those without insurance as eligible for Medicaid...
...But experience in New York, Pennsylvania, and Florida, where pre-existing state health-insurance programs for kids are now receiving Kidcare funding, is not encouraging...
...Children with serious illnesses were going untreated because their parents couldn't afford coverage...
...Medicaid also offers a richer benefits package...
...The answer has nothing to do with children's health and everything to do with the fact that Al Gore and the Children's Defense Fund need Kidcare more than kids do...
...This is not a brief for cutting off Medicaid or Kid-care...

Vol. 4 • April 1999 • No. 28


 
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