This is an archive page. The links are no longer being updated.

Date: Friday, July 31, 1998                                             
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 
Contact: HCFA Press Office (202) 690-6145

HHS APPROVES MARYLAND PLAN TO INSURE MORE CHILDREN


HHS Secretary Donna E. Shalala announced approval of Maryland's plan to expand health coverage for thousands of uninsured children through the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP).

Maryland could receive as much as $62 million in FY 1998 in new funds under the federal CHIP program -- the historic, bipartisan legislation signed last year by President Clinton. The CHIP law allocates $24 billion over the next five years to help states expand health insurance to children whose families earn too much for traditional Medicaid, yet not enough to afford private health insurance. Maryland plans to expand its Medicaid program with its CHIP allotment and officials estimate they will insure an additional 15,500 children. Maryland - like all states with CHIP plans - will receive federal matching funds only for actual expenditures on insuring children.

Maryland is the 26th CHIP plan to be approved in the 11 months since CHIP funds have been available. Together, these 25 states and Puerto Rico anticipate providing health insurance coverage for more than 2 million currently uninsured children within the next three years.

"Too many working parents can't afford health care for their children, and too many children are at risk," Secretary Shalala said. "The Clinton Administration and the states are working together to give children the health care they need to live longer, healthier lives. That's good for all of us."

CHIP gives states three options for devising a plan to cover uninsured children: designing a new children's health insurance program; expanding current Medicaid programs; or a combination of both strategies. HHS must approve each state's plan before CHIP funds become available.

Maryland will use its CHIP allocation to expand Medicaid coverage to children between birth and age 19 and whose families have incomes at or below 200 percent of the federal poverty level (the federal poverty level for a family of four is $16,450).

"The success of the CHIP program has shown an inspiring amount of cooperation between the federal government and the states," said Nancy-Ann DeParle, administrator of the Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA), which administers CHIP, Medicaid and Medicare. "It is through those efforts that we will realize the Administration's goal of providing health insurance to those who need it."

"We're pulling together to help hard-working, low-income parents give their kids the same kind of high quality health care others take for granted," said Claude Earl Fox, M.D., M.P.H., administrator of the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), the agency working with HCFA and states to implement CHIP. "Free or low-cost health insurance is what families need to ensure their kids can grow up strong and healthy."

For the first year of the program, allotments totaling $4.3 billion are available to states whose plans are approved by HHS by Sept. 30, 1999. In addition to the 26 plans that have been approved -- Alabama, Colorado, South Carolina, Florida, Ohio, California, Illinois, New York, Michigan, Missouri, New Jersey, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Wisconsin, Oregon, Texas, Idaho, Puerto Rico, Indiana, Utah, North Carolina, Minnesota, and Maryland -- these plans have been submitted: Tennessee, Nevada, Vermont, Montana, the District of Columbia, Arkansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, Maine, New Hampshire, Georgia, Iowa, South Dakota, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, the Virgin Islands, Kansas, North Dakota, Arizona and Delaware.

# # #

Note: HHS press releases are available on the World Wide Web at: www.hhs.gov.