Watched closely by other states, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s proposal to offer near-universal health insurance to Californians at a cost of almost $15 billion was voted down by the state’s Senate Health Committee early this week. Now what?
Contained within several of the state's recent health reform initiatives have been provisions that would have extended health coverage to all children below 300 percent of the federal poverty level, regardless of their immigration status. Essentially, these proposals would fold existing county-based Healthy Kids Programs --shown to be very effective in improving vulnerable children's access to and use of care--into Healthy Families (California's version of the State Children's Health Insurance Program) and provide a stable flow of federal and state funds to support broader coverage of children. To date, however, children's coverage has been subsumed within broader health care reform plans...and gone down to defeat along with these plans. Now might be a good time to rebound from this defeat and take an incremental step forward, by pursuing universal children's coverage." Ian Hill, Health Policy Center
Most of the political players involved in health care reform were concerned with how all the moving parts would fit together given California’s complicated rules and who would end up paying for the program. Introducing new programs is easier when there are expected surpluses rather than deficits. But, ironically, the need for reform will grow even more if the economy continues to falter." Kim Rueben, Tax Policy Center
We’ve seen this movie before. Unions killed a universal coverage proposal in the 1970s because it wasn’t single-payer health care. Last year, conservatives blocked an SCHIP reauthorization bill that would have limited coverage of higher-income children and adults, because some legislators wanted even tougher limits. Psychologists have long supported the goal of 'good enough parents.' Children need adequate parents, not perfect parents. 'Good enough health reform' should likewise be our objective, not perfect or even excellent health reform. The problems with American health coverage are so serious that incremental progress – which is not easy to achieve – merits celebration, not excoriation." Stan Dorn, Health Policy Center
The decisions to focus on the Assembly without the Senate and to leave the financing for approval in a ballot initiative simply weren’t productive—a lesson for next time or for other states?" Steve Zuckerman, Health Policy Center |