|
More than 117,000 Oregon children live without health insurance. They lack access to doctors, medicine, eyeglasses, asthma inhalers, and the other health care services people with insurance take for granted. Nearly half these children may be eligible for coverage under one of Oregon’s existing public programs, but they are not enrolled. Thousands more are from working families who earn too much to qualify for those programs, but not enough to pay for private insurance.
When children lack health care, everyone suffers. Kids without access to heath care don’t do as well in school. Their treatable illnesses and injuries go untreated making them more likely to end up in emergency rooms, where they receive extremely expensive care. They become sick more often and miss more school days, requiring their parents have to stay home and care for them – which also translates to lower productivity for employers.
|