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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2002
Contact: HHS Press Office
(202) 690-6343

PRESIDENT'S BUDGET EXPANDS ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE
New Health Credits, More Health Centers, State Purchasing Pools Would Assist Uninsured


President Bush's budget for 2003 will boost funding to programs that provide health care for the uninsured and will create new tax supports to help purchase health insurance, HHS Secretary Tommy G. Thompson announced today.

"The President is proposing a comprehensive approach to improving access to health care, not a one-size-fits-all," Secretary Thompson said. "He is combining new tax provisions to support purchase of private health insurance with an affordable expansion of federal and state programs, and at the same time he is dramatically expanding the network of community health centers to provide medical care wherever it's needed."

The budget includes a number of key initiatives to help people who otherwise would lack access to health coverage and be unable to obtain needed care, including preventive care. Specifically:

"By making comprehensive health insurance more affordable, these health credits will help millions of families to buy the security that comes with private health insurance," Secretary Thompson said. "In addition, giving states the option of allowing residents to use their tax credits in conjunction with the power of group purchasing will enable states to expand access and provide a more comprehensive benefit package to moderate-income families that otherwise would be ineligible. These changes will help millions of uninsured Americans obtain health coverage."

Since taking office, President Bush and Secretary Thompson have worked to improve access to health care through innovative coverage programs in Medicaid and SCHIP programs. In August 2001, HHS launched the Health Insurance Flexibility and Accountability Initiative to make it simpler and easier for states to submit waiver requests and to have those requests promptly considered - and on Monday launched "Pharmacy Plus," a similar process to help states seeking to quickly expand access to prescription drug coverage for Medicare beneficiaries. Since January 2001, HHS has approved waivers and plan amendments that have expanded eligibility to about 1.8 million people and enhanced benefits for about 4.5 million people.

The administration also supports provisions in the House-passed economic security bill, which provide health credits to assist displaced workers as a temporary new unemployment benefit. This provision, which pays 60 percent of the cost of a health insurance plan for a year for workers eligible for unemployment insurance, would allow workers who have lost their job to keep their health care coverage through COBRA plans, mini-COBRA plans, and non-group health insurance.

As part of the President's community health center initiative, the fiscal year 2003 budget would continue to expand the safety net for those without good insurance. This will result in a total of more than 3,500 health center sites serving an estimated 12.8 million patients, including more than 5 million who have no health insurance at all.

For fiscal year 2002, HHS received a $165 million increase for the initiative, supporting 260 new and expanded centers and reaching an additional 1.25 million people. HHS' Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) today is announcing $14.6 million in grants for expanded services at 60 health centers as a result of that increased funding. More information on the 60 grants awarded today is available at www.hrsa.gov.

Community health centers serve all people regardless of their ability to pay and target their services in areas where people face financial and social barriers to accessing high-quality care. Almost half serve rural communities. Many reach homeless people and migrant workers.

"The President has a strong, long-range commitment to expanding health services for those who need care," Secretary Thompson said. "The proposal for health centers in 2003 represents an increase of 25 percent over the level when the President took office -- the first part of a multi-year plan. And his proposed increase for the National Health Service Corps would be 30 percent in 2003 alone."

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Note: All HHS press releases, fact sheets and other press materials are available at www.hhs.gov/news.