Florida, stop taking Medicaid away from kids, parents who need it | Editorial
In May, Gov.
What DeSantis knew — what most
As far as DeSantis’ boast that no state does more, well, he’s a little bit right there.
Is this what DeSantis calls “standing unequivocally” in children’s defense?
‘Unwinding’ post-COVID
The backstory on this one is a bit complicated. As COVID tightened its grip on the nation’s health care system,
Understanding that many families might not understand that they have to re-apply if they want to keep their coverage, the
HHS also set up more than a dozen waivers to Medicaid rules that will make it easier for families to re-qualify — including using data from applications for other aid such as food stamps, and multiple options to approve families without intensive income verification.
It’s hard to understand why
Worst of all,
Health advocacy groups ask
Many parents may be able to obtain coverage for their children — though not themselves — through one of the programs under the Florida Kidcare program, which includes the subsidized insurance program Healthy Kids as well as options for “medically fragile” children with serious health problems who might be eligible for free or very low-cost coverage.
For some of these children, these programs spell the difference between life and death: Their medications can cost thousands of dollars a month, and some of them need teams of more than a dozen doctors to manage their care. The state promised that medically fragile children would be among the last to be disenrolled from Medicaid.
That promise is not being kept.
Kids’ health in the balance
Without enough time to match the right program with each family, many children who are losing Medicaid coverage are at imminent risk. Advocates say they’re hearing about very sick children whose coverage has already come to an end — including 2-year-old
It doesn’t take many stories like Charlotte’s to realize that
A stern warning in June from HHS Secretary
Data suggest that many of those being dropped would have been eligible to continue Medicaid coverage. Running totals compiled by the
That’s a red flag to HHS and groups like the
And Becerra’s reaction is pretty straightforward. He wants to see more outreach, more assistance, more effort made to get in touch with families before they lose coverage. He’s not going to take excuses: States “must comply with federal rules…. and individuals must be afforded the due process to which they are entitled,” he wrote in June. “We take our oversight responsibilities extremely seriously, and while we know that states are working hard to meet the federal requirements, we will not hesitate to use the compliance authority provided by Congress.”
This is no time for DeSantis and state health officials to act with arrogant defiance — not when they are taking coverage from children who may die because of it.
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