Brown - Cincinnati Children's Hospital

CINCINNATI, OH —Today, U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-OH) joined southwest Ohio families and Dr. Mona Mansour, Director of Primary Care at Cincinnati Children’s Pediatric Primary Care Center, to call on Congress to reinvest in the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), known as Healthy Start in Ohio, as funding is set to expire at the end of this month. Brown is a member of the Senate Finance Committee, which has jurisdiction over CHIP.

During a hearing of the Finance Committee yesterday, Brown called for a five-year extension of CHIP. Both the Ohio Department of Medicaid and the Ohio Children’s Hospital Association have written in support of the five-year extension.

  • Brown has led Senate efforts to extend funding for CHIP, which is also called Healthy Start in Ohio. Healthy Start insures more than 209,000 Ohio children.
  • The Affordable Care Act reauthorized CHIP through 2019, but funding for the program is set to expire this month.

“Because of CHIP, 209,000 Ohio children have access to quality, affordable health care today – health care they may not have received otherwise,” said Brown. “CHIP has always been a bipartisan effort, and regardless of how you feel about other aspects of our health care system, making sure all of our kids have access to the best possible care is something we should all be able to work together on.”

CHIP, which was created in 1997, is a joint state-federal health insurance program for low to moderate income children and pregnant women who are not Medicaid eligible. Within three years of its initial passage, all 50 states opted into the program, providing millions with access to health insurance. Nationwide, CHIP provides access to comprehensive, affordable coverage to more than eight million children and Healthy Start helps cover more than 209,000 Ohioans. 

While the Healthy Start program in Ohio is funded until the end of the year, extending funding for CHIP is important to provide certainty to states that the program will continue and to families that their children will continue to be covered under the health insurance program.

“Now is not the time to reverse all the hard work that has been done over many years to ensure that more children have access to excellent healthcare,” said Michael Fisher, President and CEO of Cincinnati Children’s Hospital.

Brown led efforts in the Senate to protect CHIP and Healthy Ohio and the vital coverage they provide children and pregnant women nationwide. The Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 extended funding for CHIP for two years, through September of 2017.

Earlier this year, Brown secured a commitment from Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Seema Verma and Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price to work with Brown on extending CHIP. 

Brown was the lead sponsor of the Protecting and Retaining Our Children’s Health Insurance Program (PRO-CHIP) Act of 2015 in the Senate, which would have extended the program through 2019. 

 

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