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Trump's RFK Jr pick leads to stock sell-off by pharmaceutical companies; Mississippians encouraged to prevent diabetes with healthier habits; Ohio study offers new hope for lymphedema care; WI makes innovative strides, but lags in EV adoption.

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Matt Gaetz's nomination raises ethics concerns, Trump's health pick fuels vaccine disinformation worries, a minimum wage boost gains support, California nonprofits mobilize, and an election betting CEO gets raided by FBI.

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Lower voter turnout in cities, not the rural electorate, tipped the presidential election, Minnesota voters OK'd more lottery money to support conservation and clean water, and a survey shows strong broadband lets rural businesses boom.

Report: NC Losing Ground on Latino Children’s Health Coverage

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Thursday, March 19, 2020   

RALEIGH, N.C. -- The number of uninsured Latino children in North Carolina jumped by nearly 2% from 2016 to 2018, according to a new report by UnidosUS and the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families.

Ciara Zachary, health director for the group NC Child, says that's a troubling trend, especially in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic.

"Right now, when we're thinking about a public health crisis like COVID-19, we want kids and we want their families to be covered, and we want them to be healthy," she states. "So, when kids aren't getting insured and getting the health coverage that they need, they may not be getting the care that they need."

Zachary says the recent dip in the number of uninsured Latino children follows nearly a decade of increasing access for families to health coverage.

She adds that families can call 919-855-4350 or visit the state's Medicaid website to sign up their children for the Children's Health Insurance Program, also known as CHIP.

Zachary says the national rhetoric around immigrant families and undocumented youths has created a climate of fear.

"That may be sending signals or messages to parents that their children -- and them, too -- cannot get health coverage," she states. "Specifically, for North Carolina, we're behind, I believe, just Texas and Georgia for the rate of uninsured Latino kids."

Kelly Whitener, the report's co-author, notes the jump in uninsured rates occurred primarily in moderate income families.

"So, these are working families," she says. "Latino families have higher workforce participation rates, actually, than average, but they're not able to access employer-sponsored coverage.

"Or if they do have an offer of employer-sponsored coverage, it may be unaffordable or only for the worker and not extend to the whole family."

Whitener adds that in the midst of a potential economic downturn, states should be working to cut red tape, simplify their enrollment processes and boost families' access to Medicaid and CHIP.

Disclosure: Georgetown University Center for Children & Families contributes to our fund for reporting on Children's Issues, Health Issues. If you would like to help support news in the public interest, click here.


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