J.A.T. template series was designed 2006 by 4bp.de: www.4bp.de, www.oltrogge.ws
Extending health care to more kids
OneWorld Community Health Center is looking for 6,000 kids.

The agency that generally provides health care to the underserved has received $706,264 from the federal government to create a program to enroll thousands of children in either of two government insurance programs for low-income children.
Many metro-area children are eligible but aren’t enrolled because their families don’t know the programs exist or don’t know their kids could qualify, said Andrea Skolkin, chief executive officer of OneWorld. That means some of those children are going without health care or are getting far less than they could.
OneWorld’s goal is to enroll at least 6,000 children. The agency’s outreach effort has just begun.OneWorld will place staff members in day care centers, schools, after-school programs, churches, food pantries, organizations and other places.

“We want to be where people are versus making people come to us,” Skolkin said.

They will contact families at those sites and determine whether they have children who qualify but aren’t enrolled in Medicaid or the state’s Children’s Health Insurance Program.
The staff members will have laptops to take down information and scanners to scan in citizenship documents and proof of Nebraska residency. Children must be citizens to receive the health care benefits.
The agency also will take referrals. For information, call 502-8888.
OneWorld, based in the Livestock Exchange Building, 4920 S. 30th St., has hired a director and will employ five full-time staffers for the program. OneWorld also has a clinic in Plattsmouth.

President Barack Obama this year allocated $40 million to agencies in 42 states and Washington, D.C., for programs to conduct enrollment efforts over the next two years.
Through a competitive process, OneWorld was one of 69 entities to receive money. Iowa doesn’t have a program among the 69. An additional $40 million will be distributed in 2012.
Enrollment among children in Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program has gradually risen in Iowa and Nebraska. The economy has worsened and awareness of the programs has broadened, spokesmen in Iowa and Nebraska say.


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Health-Care Reform to Dump Poor Kids?
Oleta Fitzgerald, director of the Children’s Defense Fund’s Southern Regional Office, says she is concerned over the welfare of Mississippi children if either of the two health-care reform packages considered by the U.S. House and Senate ever make it into law.

The House passed H.R. 3962 earlier this month, and Senate Democrats managed to beat back the threat of a Republican filibuster a few weeks ago, allowing the Senate to move forward with debate on the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, H.R. 3590. Both bills promise big reforms in the health-care and health-insurance industries. The Association for American Medical Colleges states that nearly 15 million people will be newly eligible for Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program under H.R. 3590, at an estimated cost of $374 billion over 10 years.

Fitzgerald says both bills contain huge holes regarding CHIP coverage for Mississippi children: “Right now, the fight over health-care reform in the House and Senate is all about abortion and the public option, but the children are getting lost in this discussion,” Fitzgerald said.

The issue, she said, centers on Mississippi’s unconventional requirement for CHIP eligibility.

Many states recently expanded their Medicaid program requirements to accept people who are a little further from the federal standard for poverty. Eleven states recently extended CHIP-eligible families’ income levels up to 200 percent of the federal poverty level, or higher. ($20,800 for an individual or $35,200 for a family of three).


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Our Health Care System
With the enthusiastic disceptation raging in the commonwealth over what content our upbeat tending grouping is feat to take it is grave that we as individuals begin taking responsibility for our own wellness. If we don't take individualized responsibility for our own upbeat we haw modify up relying on a government or private grouping that crapper not or will not be healthy to support our specific problems.

The current content of our congressional leaders is to mandate that 20-30 million people who do not currently hit upbeat insurance staleness by law hit upbeat insurance or face a fine. Legislation is existence drafted to mandate that insurance companies staleness make upbeat insurance available to those individuals. There is currently a shortage of doctors and the addition of 20-30 million more people will surely result in rationing of care. Some states that hit implemented such legislation, such as Massachusetts, are already experiencing unusually daylong waits to get an appointment with a doctor.

As a commonwealth we are in terrible health. Our youngness are facing a scrutiny crisis today that often did not appear until region age. Those in region age are suffering from chronic degenerative diseases that our parents did not hit until the later stages in life. Our elderly population suffers from those same degenerative diseases including macular degeneration, Alzheimer's dementia and Parkinson's disease. Why are we having an pestilential of obesity, onset (type 2) diabetes and degenerative diseases? Why can't we do a better job of preventing disease instead of meet treating it once it is discovered?


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J.A.T. template series was designed 2006 by 4bp.de: www.4bp.de, www.oltrogge.ws