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Report: Wisconsin “Slipping" In Child Healthcare Coverage

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Thursday, November 6, 2014   

MADISON, Wis. – A report from the Georgetown Center for Children and Families in Washington shows Wisconsin is losing ground in making sure children are covered by health insurance.

"We've gone from having the sixth-highest rate of kids with health insurance in 2008, slipping to 14th in 2013,” says Jon Peacock, research director of the Wisconsin Council on Children and Families. “So we're not doing bad, but we're not doing nearly as well as we had been."

Nationally, the rate of uninsured children is now around 7 percent.

Joan Alker, the GCCF’s executive director, is the report’s author.

"The other interesting finding this year is that children in working families living on the brink of poverty are those that have the highest rate of uninsurance, compared to other income groups," she points out.

Peacock and Alker agree that the most critical priority for children in 2015 is having Congress fund the Children's health program.

"Right now, we have just over 5 million children who are uninsured in the United States,” Alker says. “If Congress doesn't fund that program, that number could swell to over 7 million. So, that's a very critical decision."

According to Alker, children who are covered by health insurance do better in school, have better access to healthcare services, and their families are protected from bankruptcy that can arise from unpaid medical bills.

Peacock says Wisconsin policy makers need to take a look at the state's recent history.

"We need to re-learn the lessons that (former Gov.) Tommy Thompson championed back in the 1990s when Wisconsin first created Badger Care, and Tommy argued that the best way to cover kids was to cover their parents, and that proved to be extremely successful," he says.

Funding for the Children's Health Insurance Program is set to expire next September.




Alker is at 202-784-4075; Peacock is at 608-284-0580. Report at http://ccf.georgetown.edu




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