Prioritize children. Feed families. Strengthen the nation | Opinion

Since early 2020, the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency provided the federal government flexibility to modify a broad range of programs affecting child health, including Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, making healthcare coverage and healthy food more accessible to children and families across the country. However, with these enhanced benefits being terminated, the stability of many families already struggling to make ends meet is now under threat.

Medicaid health coverage and SNAP’s nutritional assistance are critical safety net programs that support and advance the health of millions of families. In Delaware, 39.2% of children are enrolled in Medicaid or the Children’s Health Insurance Program, and one in nine Delawareans received SNAP benefits in Fiscal Year 2022. Families in the First State depend on SNAP to help them feed their children with 68 percent of SNAP participants being families with children.

SNAP not only alleviates food insecurity, but also helps lift more families with children out of deep poverty than any other government assistance program. SNAP is particularly important for minority households as families of color are more likely to be food insecure, and even short periods of food insecurity can have lasting negative consequences for children’s health.

Some expanded food benefits through SNAP have already ended. Pandemic-era temporary SNAP emergency allotments allowed states to provide federal funds of at least $95 per household and reduced the likelihood of a household experiencing food insecurity by around 9 percent. Effective March 1, the ending of SNAP EA combined with inflated food prices and utility costs have already created a substantial hunger cliff across the country, including in Delaware, where it is estimated that one in seven children face hunger. Black and Hispanic households have been hit the hardest.

Now, the unwinding of the PHE, coupled with the ending of pandemic-era Medicaid continuous enrollment, is predicted to have a detrimental impact on the health of children nationwide. In addition to reduced SNAP benefits, millions of children and families face potential health coverage losses.

Recent estimates from the Department of Health and Human Services and the Kaiser Family Foundation found that 15-17 million people will no longer qualify for health coverage. Children will be disproportionately affected, as an estimated 5 million kids are expected to lose Medicaid/CHIP coverage. Data show that children with healthcare coverage are more likely to use preventive healthcare services, have higher educational attainment, and grow up to be more economically secure than uninsured children.

Families need these benefits, which is why we are calling on U.S. Congress and state legislators to take immediate action to protect America’s children.

At the federal level, Congress should strengthen SNAP by reauthorizing the Farm Bill with policies that support families’ access to nutritious foods to help their children grow up healthy. Specifically, the Farm Bill should improve equitable access to healthy food options such as fruits and vegetables, both online and in stores. Other policies to prioritize health should include investing in nutrition research with a focus on research that leads to improved health outcomes through SNAP participation and expanding nutrition education to reach more communities, including underserved communities, across the country.

At the state level, Medicaid agencies should continue to collaborate with a variety of stakeholders —including children’s hospitals — on strategies to avoid potential coverage losses and monitor the impact of Medicaid re-determination. States should follow the research to help identify the most effective and scalable outreach strategies. Further, states should consider policy options, such as express lane eligibility to reach more children who qualify for Medicaid. Express lane eligibility would allow states to identify, enroll and recertify children in Medicaid if they are eligible for other federal programs including SNAP. States have an important opportunity to review and enhance their CHIP programs to ensure more children have access to healthcare.

Policymakers must continue to prioritize building a strong foundation of life-long health and well-being for children by maintaining critical support in health insurance and nutritious food. Collectively, we should strive to help create the healthiest generations of children. This is what it means to go well beyond medicine — our nation’s future depends on it.

Kara Odom Walker, MD, MPH, MSHS, is executive vice president and chief population health officer at Nemours Children’s Health. Kirk Reichard, MD, is surgical director peri-operative services and clinical director of Pediatric Surgery for Nemours Children’s Hospital, Delaware, and president of the Delaware Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Volunteers distribute a ham to the bumper to bumper attendees at the Delaware Food Bank's drive-thru event at Deltech Stanton in Newark, Friday, March 31, 2023. There was a high turnout at the event due to expiration of the COVID-19 pandemic emergency SNAP benefits.
Volunteers distribute a ham to the bumper to bumper attendees at the Delaware Food Bank's drive-thru event at Deltech Stanton in Newark, Friday, March 31, 2023. There was a high turnout at the event due to expiration of the COVID-19 pandemic emergency SNAP benefits.

This article originally appeared on Delaware News Journal: Delaware enhanced SNAP benefits