Health
Care for All Our Children:
We Can Make It Happen
No
matter how hard parents try to keep their children healthy
and safe, kids get sick and sometimes have accidents. Colds
and fevers, rashes and falls are as much a part of a child's
development as teething, crawling, walking, and talking.
The best thing parents can do to ensure that their children
stay healthy is to find and keep a regular health care provider
who offers annual check-ups and vaccinations when a child
is well and round-the-clock consulta tions and care when
a child is sick.
In
July 1996, with passage of the Act to Improve Health
Care Access (Chapter 203), Massachusetts took a
giant step toward providing all of its children with affordable,
continuous health care by expanding two key programs: MassHealth
(Medicaid) and the Children's Medical Security Plan
(CMSP). Now no child in Massachusetts needs to go without
health insurance. The challenge is to spread the
word about these and other children's health care programs.
| The
Health Care Gap in Massachusetts |
Although
the Commonwealth's outstanding hospitals and medical schools
attract people from all over the world, many Massachusetts
families have not found their way to a regular source of
health care. According to a 1995 survey by researchers based
at the Harvard School of Public Health(1), 11.4% of Massachusetts
citizens, or 683,000 people, had no health insurance. Included
in that number were 160,000 children. Fewer than 1 in 5
of the parents of these children knew about the avail ability
of Medicaid; less than 1 in 10 were aware of CMSP.
Consistent
with these figures is a recent report from the Washington-based
Center for Budget and Policy Priorities. Their research
suggests that between 25 and 40% of Massachusetts children
eligible for Medicaid were not enrolled during the same
period.
Who
is caught in this health care crunch? The largest group
consists of children of working parents. Uninsured kids
have moms and dads who do maintenance, repair, and construction,
who work in restaurants, shops, and gas stations and in
hair salons and day care centers. Some of these parents
are self-employed; others put in long hours for modest wages.
Many cannot afford private health insurance. Others are
stuck in temporary or part-time jobs where no health coverage
is available. The new law means that their kids
can get health insurance--but only if they know that it
is available.
|
A
Profile of Uninsured Families in Massachusetts, 1995
|
|
Employed:
64%
|
 |
|
Work
40 hours or more: 61%
|
 |
|
Hold
job for 5 years or more: 54%
|
 |
|
Work
in building or retail and
food/beverage trades: 51%
|
 |
|
Household
income above poverty level: 65%
|
 |
|
No
coverage for more than a year: 70%
|
 |
|
Aware
of availability of Medicaid: 18%
|
 |
|
Aware
of availability of CMSP: 7%
|
 |
| Source:
Harvard School of Public Health and Louis Harris Associates
(1995), A Survey of the Health Insureance Status
of Massachusetts Residents. |
|
What
It Means for Kids to Be Without Health Insurance
|
According
to a recent Newsweek poll, nearly 51% of parents
are concerned that their kids might have a serious accident
or ill ness, and 35% worry about finding good health care
for their kids. Parents want their children protected by
vaccinations. They want help in managing their asthma and
other chronic conditions. They want to know whether their
children are developing nor mally, whether they need glasses,
physical therapy, or counseling. To achieve those goals
they need a strong, on-going relationship with a health
care provider. For uninsured families this is very hard
to achieve. Research has found that:(2)
-
Although
an annual physical checkup is recommended for one-
to five-year-olds by the American Academy of Pediatrics,
un insured children in this age group are three
times more likely than insured kids to have
had no doctor visit within the last year.
-
Compared
to insured children, uninsured kids are three
times less likely to have received all of
their immunizations.
-
And
even when they have usual sources of care, uninsured
children are two to three times more
likely than insured kids not to have continuous access
to the same health care provider and twice
as likely not to have access to 24-hour emergency
care.
|
Lack
of Health Care is Costly
|
By the
time many uninsured children arrive at the emer gency room,
they may be so sick they need inpatient care. This is a
costly outcomephysically dangerous for the child, emo tionally
upsetting and time-consuming for the family, and a financial
drain on everyoneand one that might have been prevented
through the timely use of primary and preventive health
care. For example, research has shown that every $1 spent
on immunization for whooping cough saves $2 in other costs
and every $1 spent for measles, mumps and rubella im munization
saves $14 in other costs.(3)
Regular
doctor visits are especially important in preventing serious
episodes of asthma, bacterial pneumonia, and dehydration
the most common causes of preventable hospitalizations among
Massachusetts children, both insured and uninsured. (4)
In 1995, charges for each preventable hospitalization for
asthma averaged $3,061 per uninsured child, while charges
for treatment of bacterial pneumonia and dehydration averaged
$4,063 and $2,705, respectively. And national figures suggest
that once they are in the hospital, these children may be
short-changed in terms of quality of care. According to
a recent report from the advocacy group Families USA, long-term
uninsured children average only 42% of the inpatient hospital
care days of insured children.
|
Charges
for Preventable Hospitalizations
of Uninsured Children in Massachusetts
|
| Asthma |
$
789,920
|
| Bacterial
Pheumonia |
$
601,310
|
| Dehydration |
$
289,426
|
| Failure
to Thrive |
$
38,864
|
| All
Other Conditions |
$1,414,275
|
|
No
one needs to convince Deirdre L. of the importance
of health insurance. A family day care provider, she
was unable to find health insurance for her daughters
until the advocacy group Health Care For All helped
her enroll them in the Children's Medical Security
Plan. Both of her kids have asthma.
"For
a while, I used my credit cards to get their medicine,"
she says, "until I couldn't pay up and the cards
were taken away from me."
Ordinary
health problems became crises. "Ear infections,
colds, asthma attacks, things people with insurance
think are aggravating, they have no idea what it's
like with no insurance. When my daughter got a sore
throat, I'd get on my knees and pray: don't let it
be strep."
And
the situation affected her daughters, who became upset
when they felt sick because they knew their mom would
panic. At one point her younger daughter put off telling
her mom about an earache for so long that she didn't
get to the emergency room until her ear drum was about
to puncture. "The girls were really excited about
joining CMSP. When I showed them the card," Deirdre
says, "my older one said, 'Now we can be sick!'
"
|
|
Children's
Health Care Programs
|
Massachusetts
families have a choice of health care programs that offer
their children access to the medical basics necessary for
survival and good health. Each program has different eligibility
guidelines and offers different services. The most widely
available programs are the following.
-
Children's
Medical Security Plan (CMSP) is the fail-safe
program: it offers a package of primary, pre ventive,
and limited emergency health care to all uninsured
children at no cost or with a monthly fee
that depends on family income.
-
MassHealth
(Medicaid) has a richer package of benefits:
it provides the most comprehensive set of health services
to all poor children at little or
no cost.
-
CommonHealth
is a MassHealth program for children with
disabilities whose family income is higher
than the standard eligibility guidelines.
To sign up for the above three programs, call
1-800-909-2677
-
Free
Care covers hospital and health center services
for all underinsured and uninsured children.
-
Healthy
Start covers pregnant teenagers and
women who are not eligible for MassHealth.
This
report was prepared by Massachusetts Kids Count, a statewide
child data project of Massachusetts Citizens for Children
and the Massachusetts Advocacy Center, funded by the Annie
E. Casey Foundation.
(c)1997
Permission to reproduce text portions of this report is
granted provided Massachusetts Kids Count 1997 is cited.
-------------------------------------
NOTES:
-
Unless otherwise noted, data in this section from Harvard
School of Public Health and Louis Harris Associates (1995),
A Survey of the Health Insureance Status of Massachusetts
Residents.
-
Data in this section from Newacheck et al. (1996), Pediatrics
and Wood et al. (1990), Pediatrics.
-
Mann, C. (1994) Missed Opportunities: A Report on Children's
Health Programs in Massachusetts. Boston: Massachusetts
Law Reform Institute.
-
Data in this section from Massachusetts Department of
Public Health and Massachusetts Rate Setting Commission.
-
Adapted from Massachusetts Human Services Coalition (1994),
State House Watch.
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