children's health insurance;
covered services
X |
Committee on Health |
|
|
|
Committee on Financial Institutions & Insurance |
|
|
|
Caucus and COW |
|
|
|
As Passed the House |
|
SB 1087 allows school districts to perform outreach for the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) administered through the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System (AHCCCS) The bill expands coverage for eye examinations, non-emergency transportation and mental health services.
The Children’s Health Insurance Program was created in 1997 to provide health insurance coverage for uninsured low-income children under the age of nineteen. Primary funding for CHIP is provided through a federal grant and state-matching tobacco tax monies. As of March 1, 2001, 103,618 children have been approved for health coverage through CHIP (47,015 for KidsCare and 56,603 for Medicaid.)
The State Children’s Insurance Program (SCHIP) was created by Congress with the provision that states would be required to use each year’s allotment within three years of the grant or the funds would be redistributed to states that had spent their allotment. Forty states, including Arizona, returned 44 percent of federal funds from the allotment distributed in 1998.