Court Healthcare Decision Protects Some Early Childhood Priorities
Politicians revving up for the November elections are still parsing the impact of last week鈥檚 Supreme Court healthcare ruling. But for some policymakers in the education world, the focus has been not on campaign rhetoric, but on students.
One potential effect of the Court鈥檚 decision is a rewriting of the relationship between states and the federal government. Chief Justice John Roberts that the federal government cannot withhold all Medicaid funding from states that choose not to participate in the program鈥檚 expansion. The court ruled that requiring states to expand their coverage in order to continue receiving federal funds is coercive, given that states rely so heavily on federal funds to support Medicaid.
With this move, the Court cast constitutional doubt on the 鈥渃arrot-and-stick鈥 approach frequently used by the federal government to influence state policies. (Think, for example, of the 1984 law that required Congress to withhold all federal highway funds from states that didn鈥檛 raise the legal drinking age to 21.) Jennifer Cohen, senior policy analyst for our sister blog Ed Money Watch, , 鈥淲hat is the difference between taking away funding for Medicaid and taking away funding for education, as would have happened had any state opted out of [No Child Left Behind]?鈥
that the narrow legal wording in the Medicaid decision will make it hard to read the decision in a way that applies to transportation or education funding. And many federal education programs are civil rights-related, which puts schools on different legal ground than Medicaid, and would presumably make the 鈥渃oercion鈥 argument harder to justify.
Leaving aside the legal implications the decision may have on federal education policy-making moving forward, the law could also have significant impacts on uninsured children.
Under the , the Congressional Budget Office estimated an additional 30 million Americans would gain access to health insurance. Most low-income children are already covered through the State Children鈥檚 Health Insurance Program (CHIP), but are children under the age of 18. An post last week outlined some of the research on the connections between healthcare and education. Children with insurance have demonstrably better health statuses than uninsured children 鈥 and better academic outcomes. If those children gain access to healthcare through the Affordable Care Act, it could improve their odds of doing better in school, graduating from high school, and even attending and finishing college.
Health problems, which are more common among uninsured children, have been shown to cause greater rates of absenteeism from school. An analysis of CHIP state health insurance programs found that as children became insured at higher rates, they missed school at lower rates. Through the Affordable Care Act, CHIP and Medicaid were both through 2019.
The Obama administration has several other programs that prioritize the link between healthcare and education. The program 鈥 funded at $60 million in fiscal year 2012 鈥 was designed by the White House to provide comprehensive neighborhood-based services, including healthcare services. According to U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, 鈥淧romise Neighborhoods recognizes that children need to be surrounded by systems of support inside and outside of the classroom to help them be successful in school and beyond.鈥
Finally, another early childhood program included in the healthcare reform law 鈥 $1.5 billion in mandatory funding for the 鈥 was upheld by the Court. That means the home visitation program, which provides information for low-income mothers and mothers-to-be, will continue to operate.