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New Bush Rules Make It Harder To Insure Children

By Jake on August 21,2007

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New rules by the Bush administration make it harder for states to broaden coverage of the Children's Health Insurance Program. It's all about money for private insurance companies. As usual, the administration makes the changes late on a Friday while Congress is in recess. More likely to avoid notice that way, as if the Washington press corps gives a damn.

Excerpt:

Administration officials outlined the new standards in a letter sent to state health officials on Friday evening, in the middle of a monthlong Congressional recess. In interviews, they said the changes were intended to return the Children’s Health Insurance Program to its original focus on low-income children and to make sure the program did not become a substitute for private health coverage.

After learning of the new policy, some state officials said yesterday that it could cripple their efforts to cover more children and would impose standards that could not be met.

“We are horrified at the new federal policy,” said Ann Clemency Kohler, deputy commissioner of human services in New Jersey. “It will cause havoc with our program and could jeopardize coverage for thousands of children.”

Stan Rosenstein, the Medicaid director in California, said the new policy was “highly restrictive, much more restrictive than what we want to do.”

 


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