- Affordable Care Act Info
- Covering Kids & Families, a Madison-based statewide health care advocacy coalition, offers information on its website about the Affordable Care Act, including how to obtain health care coverage. Access the site atLeaderTelegram.com/links.
Posted: Sunday, September 15, 2013 12:27 am | Updated: 12:29 am, Sun Sep 15, 2013.
Associated Press | 2 comments
Community
organizers throughout Wisconsin plan to begin offering sessions as
early as Oct. 2 to help people being removed from the state’s Medicaid
program next year to assess other health care options.
Republican
Gov. Scott Walker rejected federal money to expand Medicaid coverage
through the state’s BadgerCare program, and instead the state will
reduce enrollment by an estimated 92,000 people. The state plans to
start sending letters later this month to those who will lose coverage
after Dec. 31.
Those
residents are expected to seek health insurance through a new online
exchange being set up by the federal government as part of the
Affordable Care Act, the nation’s health care reform law often referred
to as Obamacare. The exchange will allow people to shop for health
insurance and compare plans, but advocates worry that many low-income
residents have limited access to the Internet and could have difficulty
figuring out their best options.
“There
could be issues around literacy. They may not be English-speaking, they
may be homeless. They could get the notice in late September, and they
may not understand it,” said Molly Bandt, director of Covering Kids
& Families, a Madison-based statewide health care advocacy
coalition. “There are still things to work out — although, on the
positive end, there’s a lot of energy in trying to get the word out.”
Covering
Kids & Families, which works to get children and families enrolled
in Medicaid programs, is among the groups planning seminars at job
centers, schools and libraries across the state. Trainers will discuss
the Affordable Care Act, explain what is and isn’t changing, and help
people figure out which plans work best for them.
The
Milwaukee Health Care Partnership has been asking churches, community
leaders and advocacy organizations to help reach out to low-income
people losing their coverage. The idea is that it would be most
effective to reach people through those they already know and trust,
executive director Joy Tapper said. Pastors and neighbors can contact
Medicaid recipients, let them know about the coming changes and direct
them to the partnership for more information, she said.
That
strategy worked well in Massachusetts, where organizers identified
word-of-mouth as one of the most critical factors in successful outreach
after the state implemented its own health care reform plan, Tapper
said.
“The best thing is for people to hear from trusted sources,” she said.
As of Jan. 1, Medicaid coverage will be available only to people living
in poverty. Previously, it was available to some residents earning as
much as 140 percent of the federal poverty level. Along with the 92,000
people being removed from the rolls, community groups are looking to
help 400,000 people who currently have no medical insurance.
Residents can start signing up for insurance through the exchange on Oct. 1.
To help, the Northwest Wisconsin Concentrated Employment Program in
Ashland is aiming to hold at least four informational sessions in each
of 27 counties across western and northwestern Wisconsin.
Marcy Pratt, the group’s chief financial officer, said the sessions will
target consumers who will be getting insurance through the federal
exchange and small businesses who may want to start offering insurance
for their employees.
Leaders
in several community groups worried that people might try to avoid
dealing with the issue because it seems too daunting or they don’t have
time because they’re working two jobs to make ends meet.
“It’s
going to be a rough, bumpy ride for the first year at least,” predicted
Bobby Peterson, executive director for ABC for Health, a nonprofit law
firm in Madison that helps people get health care. “Unfortunately the
infrastructure for assistance is fairly limited right now. We’re just
trying to develop materials that will help folks understand what’s going
on.”
No comments:
Post a Comment