Modesto Bee Article
By Ken Carlson, Modesto Bee Staff Writer
last updated: July 22, 2009

Andres Castillo Jr. gets a check up from Dr. Jonas Bernal through the Healthy Families
program at Stanislaus County Health Services in Modesto, Calif., Wednesday, July 22, 2009.
How will the state budget impact Healthy Families, the low-cost insurance program for the
working poor? Health advocates say that hundreds of thousands of children could lose coverage.
(Adm Golub / adgolub@modbee.com)
As details of the state budget deal emerged this week, some health care advocates
said the agreement cuts too deeply into safety net programs for the poor and disabled.
According to one estimate, a $144 million budget cut to Healthy Families, the low-cost
health insurance for the working poor, would result in denying coverage to almost 780,000
children in California.
That number includes 335,000 children who will be placed on
a waiting list because the state board that oversees the program froze enrollment last week,
plus 443,000 who would be disenrolled during the budget year that started July 1, said Health
Access, a nonprofit concerned with increasing access to health care.
"The cuts would be the biggest rollback of coverage in state budget history," said
Anthony Wright, the group's executive director. "These cuts are shredding the safety net."
Healthy Families has been a fallback for middle-class families that lose employer-provided
insurance or have lost jobs during the recession. Health Access estimated that 5,750 eligible
children could be denied coverage in Stanislaus County and the cuts would require 6,655
or 48 percent of those enrolled to lose their coverage.
Child advocates said it is
more cost effective to give preventive care or treat chronic illness in the doctor's office
rather than in the emergency room.
Mary Ann Lee, managing director of the Stanislaus
County Health Services Agency, couldn't say how many of the 14,000 Stanislaus County children
in Healthy Families could lose coverage.
"If a person does not have coverage, they are
less likely to seek appropriate care," Lee said. "It has a negative impact on health outcomes."
Many kids to lose coverage
Healthy Families covers nearly 1 million children
in California, and neither the governor's office nor the Managed Risk Medical Insurance Board
disputed that large numbers of children would lose coverage under the plan.
"The governor
sees the real consequences behind these cuts," said Lisa Page, a spokeswoman for Gov.
Schwarzenegger. "But the state has no choice. Its wallet is empty, and its credit card is maxed
out. The governor protected programs like Healthy Families from even deeper cuts by compromising
on some one-time solutions."
In Stanislaus County, families denied coverage may be able
to take advantage of the income-based sliding fee scale at county clinics, which ranges from
$42 to $140 for doctor visits. The Healthy Cubs program also provides access to doctor visits
and prescriptions for children 5 and younger.
The budget agreement includes funding cuts
to mental health services, care for patients with AIDS, adult day health care, rural health care
and financially distressed hospitals.
Under the plan, the most severely disabled of 425,000
people in the In-Home Supportive Services program still would receive the full range of
services.
But advocates for the disabled said that 40,000 elderly or disabled people would
lose caregivers provided through the program and 85,000 would lose domestic services, such as
meal preparation, laundry or transportation to medical appointments.
The program, which
in many cases pays family members to help their loved ones with bathing, dressing and using the
bathroom, has proved to be far less expensive than caring for the patients in nursing homes.
New rules target fraud
The budget deal includes Schwarzenegger's proposals for
rooting out fraud in the IHSS program by requiring fingerprinting of recipients and home
caregivers.
Advocacy groups doubt those measures will uncover much fraud but say they will
make it harder for people to find caregivers. "Very often, the wages paid to caregivers is close
to minimum wage," said Dan Brzovic, associate managing attorney for Disability Rights California.
"People at that wage scale won't want to deal with the additional requirements."
CalWORKS,
the welfare-to-work program, could sustain $375 million in cuts to cash grants, including less
housing assistance for low-income families, and the deal could pave the way for private
contractors to replace county workers in handling the eligibility process for Medi-Cal and other
social services.
Critics said the plan would impose new rules on CalWORKS that will confuse
families that need the help.
"We are having historically high increases in the number of
people who are seeking assistance," said Frank Mecca, executive director of the County Welfare
Directors Association. "At the very moment in their lives when this assistance is most critical,
we are going to pull the rug out from under these people."
Bee staff writer Ken Carlson can be reached at
kcarlson@modbee.com or 578-2321.