Since August 2007, the House has voted at least seven times for legislation to expand the popular State Children’s Health Insurance Program. In a recent blog we explained how Former-president George W. Bush twice vetoed similar legislation. Bush adamantly opposed the legislation on the ground that it would lead to “government-run health care for every American,” reports The Times.
Rep. Henry A. Waxman, a California Democrat said that the bill was “a down payment” and “an essential start” to the ultimate goal of health reform. Speaker Nancy Pelosi proclaimed the passage and signing of the bill as the result of the last fall’s historic presidential election, stating:
“This is the beginning of the change that the American people voted for in the last election, and that we will achieve with President Barack Obama.”
One of the major features of the bill is that it allows states to cover certain legal immigrants, who are currently barred from Medicaid and the State Children’s Health Insurance Program for five years after they enter the United States.
According to The Times:
“The bill requires states to verify that people covered by the children’s health program are United States citizens or legal residents. But states are given a new option. Instead of requiring people to produce documents showing citizenship, states can try to verify eligibility by matching a person’s name and Social Security number against federal records.”
In addition to allowing states to extend coverage to legal immigrants without requiring five years of residence, the bill also requires states to provide dental care and equal coverage of mental and physicial illnesses – or “mental health parity" – under the children’s health program.
Expansion of the State Children’s Health Insurance Program comes as Tom Daschle’s withdrawal from nomination for Secretary of Health & Human Services has many worried that the "overhaul" of the U.S. health care system could be seriously delayed, according to Medical News Today.
"Obama is unlikely to find someone with both the health policy experience and congressional connections of Daschle,"
reports CQ Today.
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