By
Ching Lee
October 2, 2002
MODESTO – More than 5,650 Stanislaus County
children at or below age 5 fall through the cracks of publicly sponsored
health care programs each year.
In an effort to increase access to health care services for vulnerable
children in the community, the Stanislaus County Board of Supervisors
gave the Health Services Agency the thumbs on Tuesday to accept $1.3 million
in funding to establish the Child Health Access Program.
Services offered through CHAP will be provided by HSA through its clinics
in Turlock, Modesto, Ceres, Hughson and Empire. The HSA Momobile will
also provide services at Chrysler School, Del Rio Mobile Home Park, Shackleford
School and Orville Wright School.
Patients will have access to primary and preventive medical care, ambulatory
specialty care, pharmaceuticals, lab, X-ray and rehabilitation services.
While not an insurance plan, CHAP targets Stanislaus County children
ages 0 to 5 who live in families with incomes at or below 300 percent
of the Federal Poverty Leval and who do not qualify for government health
insurance programs such as Medi-Cal or Healthy Families.
Although an estimated 10,000 children in the county are currently eligible
for such programs, they are not enrolled.
According to Mary Ann Lee, associate director HSA’s managed care
division, many parents of these children may be unaware of the available
programs out there, or they may erroneously believe that their children
are not eligible.
“There are a number of perceived barriers,” she said. “Some
may be concerned about their immigration status.”
Deterred by misinformation and frightened of bureaucracy, parents with
uninsured and underinsured children usually receive no care or limited
care even when their children’s health conditions become life threatening.
The idea of CHAP is not to replace Medi-Cal or Healthy Families, said
Lee. Rather, the program hopes to act as a gateway to other programs for
which these children may be eligible.
“Maybe this is the way to capture them,” said Supervisor
Pat Paul.
To do that, HSA will work with employees of various local agencies and
organizations such as school districts, Health Families and WIC (Women,
Infants and Children) programs and other outreach workers who already
have access to families in need.
The idea is to get these families to apply for other government programs
while their children are being cared for. Therefore, eligibility screening
will take place at the clinics.
“We want to engage their attention, but we also want to emphasize
preventive care,” Lee said.
Income eligibility for the program will be based on the parents’
own self-declaration, explained Lee.
“We won’t be asking for any documents,” she said, although
Stanislaus County residency will be required.
Other outreach efforts will include developing, producing and distributing
promotional materials such as placing advertisements in foreign language
stations and newspapers. Staff members will also make presentations to
various organizations to promote and explain the program.
CHAP is set to begin Jan. 1, 2003, as a three-year pilot program. Subsequent
funding for the program is estimated at $3.2 million for the second year
and $3.6 million for the third year.
Reprinted by permission of the Turlock Journal.
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