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School-Based Health Care Programs Receive $95 Million From Affordable Care Act

First Posted: 07/14/11 03:44 PM ET Updated: 09/13/11 06:12 AM ET

School

Obamacare is going to school.

In a collaboration between the U.S. Departments of Education and Health & Human Services, the U.S. government is awarding $95 million provided by the Affordable Care Act to expand school-based health clinics.

U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan joined HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius on a conference call with reporters to announce the news. It is the second recent announcement that involves the joint work of the two government agencies, following the unveiling of guidelines for competing in the early childhood Race to the Top competition, which has states vie for pre-school program funding.

The health care awards will go toward capital planning in 278 school districts and health care programs that serve schools. The money, Sebelius said, will be used for updating facilities in order to expand their capacity. Sebelius also noted the health care law has already benefited students.

"Thanks to the law, it's now illegal for insurers to deny children coverage because of preexisting health conditions," she said. "It means that families don't have to worry any longer that their child will be locked out of the insurance market because of asthma or diabetes."

Sebelius linked the new initiative directly to that aspect of the Affordable Care Act, saying, "The investment we're announcing today builds on this exciting progress."

The clinics, she said, make schools safer and happier, and "also promote the kinds of healthy lifestyles we know can have huge lifetime benefits."

Duncan said expanding school clinics would help learning.

"Hundreds of thousands of additional students will be treated and served, increasing the amount of time they spend in the classroom learning," he said, calling the measure "an unprecedented investment in school-based health care."

Duncan and like-minded education reformers have been criticized for ignoring conditions such as poverty and other environmental factors, instead focusing on on teacher effectiveness as the key to improving schools.

But Duncan said school clinics are of "personal" interest to him, because when he ran Chicago's public schools he saw "the desperate need" for better health care for students. With the addition of health centers based out of schools, he said, the district saw grades rise.

"Many [students] said without those services there's just no way they would have continued in school, they would have dropped out," he said. "These services can literally be life-transforming."

He added that the goal is to increase access to school clinics, which also can offer preventative care to neighborhood parents.

Mary Wakefield, an HHS official in charge of the rewards program, said the money can not be used for personnel or other service issues.

"The funding that's made available is to support construction, renovation, and equipment purchases that are needed in the health centers," she said. Grant applications had to specify plans for spending the funds and show how they would increase access to care."

The program received 356 applications, and a review committee selected the winners.

Some school districts receiving the money include the Los Angeles Unified School District, the New Orleans School Board and the special New Orleans Recovery District.

Sebelius noted that the programs and school districts that applied to receive the grants now serve about 800,000 students; the grants would increase their capacity by 440,000.

The funding comes from $200 million allocated for solving infrastructure problems under the health care reform law.

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Obamacare is going to school. In a collaboration between the U.S. Departments of Education and Health & Human Services, the U.S. government is awarding $95 million provided by the Affordable Care A...
Obamacare is going to school. In a collaboration between the U.S. Departments of Education and Health & Human Services, the U.S. government is awarding $95 million provided by the Affordable Care A...
 
 
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
broui
No d#%& cat. No d#%& cradle.
07:33 PM on 07/16/2011
Obamacare?!? Did this reporter work for Rupert Murdoch?

HCR is not a new system. It somewhat improved the really bad old one. Labelling it anything is intellectually lazy.
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11:15 PM on 07/14/2011
I found this about school clincs:

http://www.hrsa.gov/ourstories/schoolhealthcenters/

This sounds comprehensive and what many children need--especially the mental health and counseling--but I wonder how much they will be out of class for this and also if the money include paying for counselors and nurses on site to take take of the medical/health needs.

School counselors and school psychologists are being cut when budgets tighten, so to put those vital personnel back in schools would be a very good thing, but I still wonder what the scope of services will be and about school liability.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Joy Resmovits
11:30 PM on 07/14/2011
Thanks for this. FYI -- the funding is only used for capitol projects such as facilities and infrastructure. Not personnel etc.
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11:05 PM on 07/14/2011
I would like to know what kind of medical services will be given and if the school will be liable for the results. To put clinics in schools is a bad idea. Clinics belong in communities where everyone can access them, not just children. Schools are supposed to be for education, they are not supposed to be social service agencies. Too much burden is on schools already. And it's one more way to help parents abdicate responsibility for the health of their children.

That schools distribute condoms and other birth control to students is just contributing to poor choices made by young people who don't have the maturity to engage in sex and cope with its consequences. Sometimes they don't even need their parents' permission to get birth control, which is outrageous. Schools are overstepping what they should be doing and yet it's the parents and public (when teens get pregnant) who have to deal with the outcomes.
03:34 PM on 07/15/2011
Most schools don't want to deal with this…they are being mandated to though.
03:49 PM on 07/15/2011
The applications were voluntary. It's a competitive grant. Where are you getting the idea that anyone is being mandated to participate?

I actually logged on to respond to a different comment that you wrote, but this one really makes me think you're just ignorant of the program and how it operates.

Most schools don't want to deal with sick kids. Most teachers don't want to deal with mental health barriers that get in the way of learning. Most teachers don't want to figure out which kids have a genuine learning disability and which just can't see the blackboard.

Unless you have any evidence about schools being forced to participate in a voluntary, competitive program, I really have no intention of spending more time arguing with you.
10:26 PM on 07/14/2011
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) (HR 3590) signed into law (Obama Care) in March of 2010 does much to increase access to health care, the cost associated with equal access is poorly managed and with an implementation plan sure to be worse than our current health care system.

The federal government should not be providing for these services. The state and local government should. The beauty of our Republic (and we have a republic...Not a democracy) is that if you don't like something in one state...you can move to a different one. So if you don't like the socialized health care in Massachusetts...move. But Massachusetts has a right to provide health care for their citizens if the citizens demand it. But they should not scream to the federal government when their Emergency Rooms go broke from their poor planning. This is another reason why the direct election of senators is a bad thing. Senators originally were chosen by state legislators so that state rights are protected.

Read more on my blog at: www.BenFrasier.com/blog
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rltballer
why is equality difficult for some to understand?
03:38 PM on 07/14/2011
Thank goodness for the democrats and president Obama. Dems care for our citizens. republicans care about big business
03:17 PM on 07/14/2011
What kinds of services will there be and will it interfere with learning. I know healthy is essential to learning, but will education take a back seat here.
02:21 PM on 07/15/2011
Healthy students make better learners. Sickness interferes with learning.
03:35 PM on 07/15/2011
So does leaving class for a normal check up. Why can't we just have these clinics somewhere where everyone can use them?