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Insurance
options for kids
By
Soren Velice
More
than a year after its inception, Washington states
Childrens Health Insurance Program (CHIP), along with
other medical assistance programs, has met with some success
in Blaine and Whatcom County.
About
1,000 people have signed up since March of 2000, said
Ann Bright, Whatcom County Opportunity Councils medical
outreach coordinator. Our goal is to have no uninsured
kids in Whatcom County.
Department
of Health and Human Services (DSHS) medical assistance
program manager Selia Evans said 3,586 uninsured children
in Whatcom County are eligible for some sort of medical
assistance.
Blaine
Family Service Centers Andrée Marcus-Nelson,
trained by Bright to handle the programs locally, said many
kids in Blaine and Birch Bay are eligible. Im
not sure just how many kids are eligible in the Blaine/Birch
Bay area, she said, but every child who qualifies
for free/reduced lunch is eligible.
She
said approximately 40 percent of Blaines students
get free or reduced lunches. This only includes kids
actually signed up for the program, so there are actually
more kids out there who qualify, she said. She added
she has talked to 80 people about the programs, 29 of which
were referrals from the free/reduced lunch program; she
also said she recently signed a family up for CHIP that
did not qualify for free/reduced lunch.
Marcus-Nelson
said the FSC spreads the word about medical assistance through
parent groups, teachers, counselors and others, but she
often finds people who havent heard about CHIP or
other programs. I think its working well,
she said, although I seem to continually run across
kids who do not have medical and could easily qualify.
Marcus-Nelson
said she thought part of the problem lies in the stigma
attached to welfare - now called WorkFirst - but she stressed
that medical assistance programs and WorkFirst, although
both administered by DSHS, are separate programs with separate
applications and eligibility requirements.
A family
of four earning up to $44,000 per year can qualify for CHIP.
If they pay for daycare, Evans said, well
subtract that from their income. They cannot have
existing insurance, she added.
CHIP
costs families $10 per month per child, not to exceed $30
a month per family, with $5 co-pays for prescriptions and
doctor visits and a limit on what a family would have to
spend in a year.
Families
interested in the programs can call the FSC at 332-7179
or call DSHS Healthy Kids Now toll-free at 1-877-543-7669.
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