Flu Season is Here! Dial 211 for Vaccine Info

Flu season has officially arrived.  Information about flu shots in the Bay Area is available by simply dialing 211.  Your local 211 call center can provide information in over 150 languages about where to get flu shots.

In the United States, influenza season usually begins in October and can last until May.  The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend that everyone 6 months of age and older should get a yearly flu vaccine. It takes about two weeks after vaccination to develop an immune response.

Residents who cannot dial 211 should call 800-273-6222 to connect with your local 211 call center.  For the hearing impaired, dial 415-808-4440 (TTY) or 711.

 

Photo courtesy of mcfarlandmo via Creative Commons license.

Take a Stand for Children’s Health!

  • This op-ed is co-authored by Shelley Kessler, San Mateo Central Labor Council Executive Secretary/Treasurer and United Way of the Bay Area Board Member, and Eric McDonnell, United Way of the Bay Area Executive Vice President and Chief Operations Officer.

Four million of California’s poorest children, including 300,000 in the Bay Area, are in danger of losing their health coverage.

Congress – under pressure to shrink the national deficit – is backpedaling on key elements of the Affordable Care Act that ensure needy kids get basic health care.

When Congress passed the Affordable Care Act, it explicitly prohibited states from altering eligibility and enrollment requirements for children’s health insurance.  In California, this means Healthy Families and Medi-Cal cannot create additional barriers to access and enrollment.

Unfortunately, there are members in Congress who are now advocating to repeal these provisions in a misguided effort to achieve short-term state and federal budget savings.  As a result, California will be permitted to institute cuts to vital health safety net programs, reducing the ability of families to access care.

These proposed cuts could not come at a worse time.  The recession has hit California families hard.  U.S. Census figures released last week indicate that more than 6 million people in California – more than 2 million of them children – lived in poverty last year, an increase for the sixth straight year.

Record numbers lack health insurance.  With statewide unemployment over 11 percent, thousands of families who relied on employer-based health coverage are now uninsured.   As a result, their children are less likely to get preventative care and more likely to require costly emergency care.

Medi-Cal and Healthy Families are lifelines for California families who are struggling with unemployment and reductions in family health coverage on the job.  This is clearly illustrated by the surge in Medi-Cal enrollment, which is up 12.5 % in the last three years, compared to just a 1.1% increase in the three years prior to the recession.

Children are relatively inexpensive to cover: children make up 41% of the total Medi-Cal enrollment, yet they only account for 19% of all Medi-Cal expenditures.  When children take advantage of preventative care offered by insurance coverage, costly hospitalizations are prevented.  Not to mention that healthy kids perform better in school, which helps prepare them for success in life.

In California, there are already 773,000 uninsured children living below 200 percent of the federal poverty level. That represents one of seven low-income, uninsured children nationally.

Let’s not put another 4 million California children at risk of losing their health coverage.  Congress and the Administration should do everything they can to protect the health of our children by rejecting attempts to weaken Medi-Cal and Healthy Families.

If you care about protecting the health of our state’s most vulnerable children, call your Congressional Representative today and tell them, “No more cuts to health care and insurance for poor children.”

 

Take Action Against Poverty

The soaring national poverty rate has made headlines all week:  2010 Census figures show the U.S. poverty rate is the second-highest in 45 years; record numbers lack health insurance and live in deep poverty.

The good news is you can take action today. Right now, Governor Jerry Brown has legislation on his desk that would make it much easier for low-income and unemployed families to access and enroll in subsidized health coverage – Assembly Bill 1296.

Help us make the the final push to pass AB 1296, which makes sure that there is “no wrong door” when low-income children and their families try to access health care – meaning, regardless of which program or plan they apply for in California, they will get enrolled in a health service plan.

Email Governor Brown today! Tell him that you want him to sign AB 1296!  A sample email, more details about the bill, and action steps are below. If you need more support, contact United Way’s Susan Jeong at 415-808-4359.

Step 1

Click here to go to the Governor’s contact page.

Step 2

Type in suggested text (or write your own!).

“My name is [name]. I’m writing to urge the Governor to sign AB 1296 – this bill will help millions of children and families access health care by streamlining the application process. Thank you.”

What does AB 1296 do?

AB 1296
This bill makes it easier for low-income families to get health coverage. If this bill passes, there will be one application for several health care options. This is good news for families who often find it difficult to navigate the public benefit systems.