(1) The legislature finds that:
(a) Improving the health of children in Washington state is
an investment in a productive and successful next generation.
The health of children is critical to their success in school and
throughout their lives;
(b) Healthy children are ready to learn. In order to
provide students with the opportunity to become responsible
citizens, to contribute to their own economic well-being and to
that of their families and communities, and to enjoy productive
and satisfying lives, the state recognizes the importance that
access to appropriate health services and improved health brings
to the children of Washington state. In addition, fully
immunized children are themselves protected, and in turn protect
others, from contracting communicable diseases;
(c) Children with health insurance coverage have better
health outcomes than those who lack coverage. Children without
health insurance coverage are more likely to be in poor health
and more likely to delay receiving, or go without, needed health
care services;
(d) Health care coverage for children in Washington state is
the product of critical efforts in both the private and public
sectors to help children succeed. Private health insurance
coverage is complemented by public programs that meet needs of
low-income children whose parents are not offered health
insurance coverage through their employer or who cannot otherwise
afford the costs of coverage. In 2006, thirty-five percent of
children in Washington state had some form of public health
coverage. Washington state is making progress in its efforts to
increase the number of children with health care coverage. Yet,
even with these efforts of both private and public sectors, many
children in Washington state continue to lack health insurance
coverage. In 2006, over seventy thousand children were
uninsured. Almost two-thirds of these children are in families
whose income is under two hundred fifty percent of the federal
poverty level; and
(e) Improved health outcomes for the children of Washington
state are the expected result of improved access to health care
coverage. Linking children with a medical home that provides
preventive and well child health services and referral to needed
specialty services, linking children with needed behavioral
health and dental services, more effectively managing childhood
diseases, improving nutrition, and increasing physical activity
are key to improving children's health. Care should be provided
in appropriate settings by efficient providers, consistent with
high quality care and at an appropriate stage, soon enough to
avert the need for overly expensive treatment.
(2) It is therefore the intent of the legislature that:
(a) All children in the state of Washington have health care
coverage by 2010. This should be accomplished by building upon
and strengthening the successes of private health insurance
coverage and publicly supported children's health insurance
programs in Washington state. Access to coverage should be
streamlined and efficient, with reductions in unnecessary
administrative costs and mechanisms to expeditiously link
children with a medical home;
(b) The state, in collaboration with parents, schools,
communities, health plans, and providers, take steps to improve
health outcomes for the children of Washington state by linking
children with a medical home, identifying health improvement
goals for children, and linking innovative purchasing strategies
to those goals.
[2007 c 5 § 1; 2005 c 279 § 1.]