There are few things more important to young children and teenagers than being healthy. Having regular doctor’s visits, nutritious food, dental and vision care, mental health support, access to emergency care, and treatment for long-term illness are resources that kids need to grow up to be happy in life, successful in school, and ready for the workforce.
Unfortunately, too many children are denied these resources, primarily because they don’t have health insurance that covers blood lead testing, eye exams or glasses, trips to the dentist, and mental health therapy. In southeast Pennsylvania, tens of thousands of children don’t have access to care, even though many of them are eligible for public coverage.
It’s well-documented that children with health insurance are healthier because their parents are able to take them to the doctor before a minor cold, sore tooth, or injury becomes severe, which usually leads to an emergency room visit. Vision problems in kids are often uncorrected because parents can’t afford exams and glasses.
The need for mental and emotional health (aka “behavioral health”) services has skyrocketed since COVID-induced stress and isolation impacted children. In PA, the calls to a mental health hotline doubled in just a year, with dramatic increases in Philadelphia and some of the surrounding counties.
INITIATIVES
Paid Family & Medical Leave
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Lead Paint Poisoning
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Mental Health
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Insure Every Child
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Insurance
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Health Policy Priorities
Imagine a better world for children… then take action.
Enrolling children in public coverage and ensuring the health benefits are comprehensive, that applying and re-applying is simple, and that all children qualify, including children who are undocumented.
Increasing children’s access to mental health, dental, and vision care.
Reducing childhood lead poisoning in the region and across the Commonwealth.
Legislator Look Up
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Diana McWilliams
Health Policy Director
215-563-5848 x331
dianamcw@childrenfirstpa.org
Resources
Why do Charter Schools Have Surpluses When School Districts are Broke?
The last few years have been tough for Pennsylvania schools, with budget shortfalls forced on school districts around the state by draconian cuts to the education budget. With nearly a billion dollars less in the education coffers, districts have been forced to cut...
Philly Schools Open to Fewer Resources and Continued Resistance From Harrisburg
September 8th, 2014This week, children throughout Philadelphia returned from summer vacation to find their schools in worse shape than when they left. Unfortunately, our legislators in Harrisburg decided to extend their own summer vacation instead of dealing with...
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Cutting Funding For Philadelphia Schools Wipes Out Academic Gains
Thanks to chronic underfunding from the State, the School District of Philadelphia is $81 million short of what it needs to open this year and hundreds of millions of dollars behind the full funding it needs to educate our children. The Inquirer reports that the...
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Education Cuts = Property Tax Hikes for Bucks and Montgomery County Homeowners
In 2011, Pennsylvania legislators cut nearly a billion dollars from public education and left our schools shorthanded and without a funding formula. The budget cuts were needed, ostensibly, because Harrisburg—and therefore the taxpayers—could not afford the...
What $440 Million Buys for Philadelphia Students
When it comes to the School District of Philadelphia, a lot of numbers get thrown around. $440 million requested. $216 million to keep the status quo. $120 million sales tax. With all these large numbers, it’s not hard to lose sight of what...
Sales Tax Split Harms Students and Hardly Helps Pensions
Everyone agrees that the School District of Philadelphia is in dire financial straits. What they cannot agree on, however, is what they are willing to do to get out of them. The District says it needs $216 million to avoid an additional 1,000...
Lies, Damned Lies, and the PA Budget
PCCY has long advocated for a restoration of the nearly $1 billion cut from public education during Governor Corbett’s first year in office. Now there is a new argument against restoring the cuts: they never happened. In fact, the Governor and some of...
What’s Really Causing The Chaos At Bartram High?
While the city continues to reel from the assault on a conflict-resolution specialist by a student at Bartram High School, we must look at the conditions that allowed it to happen and what can be done about them. Dangerous things can happen when you mix increasing...
Not Adding Up: Disparities in Access to Full Course Loads and Suspensions in Philly Schools
We have long known that disparities in access to early childhood education lead to an achievement gap later in school and in life. Now we know that access is not the only disparity that needs to be addressed. According to a new study by the Department...
Governor Blames School Cuts on Phantom Deficit
Governor Corbett has taken a lot of heat for cutting nearly a billion dollars from education during his first year in office, money he has not yet replenished. Recently, the Governor explained that this was necessary due to the $4 billion deficit he inherited...