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Health bill proposal for 'home visitation' sparks Big Brother fears

By: Susan Ferrechio
Chief Congressional Correspondent
August 13, 2009

WALSENBURG, CO - AUGUST 05: Family nurse practicioner Julie Klaker gives a sports physical to Brian Aguirre, 16, at the Spanish Peaks Outreach Clinic on August 5, 2009 in Walsenburg, Colorado. The Spanish Peaks Regional Health Center treats rural Coloradans who come for medical care from throughout southern Colorado, where hospitals and clinics are scarce. The outreach clinic is designed for patients with little or no health coverage. (Photo by John Moore/Getty Images) (Getty Images)

A proposal for a government program that would send nurses into the homes of low-income women to counsel them about their pregnancies and parenting skills failed to gain support in Congress this year, but has been revived in the health care legislation.

The language, buried deep in the 1,000-plus-page House health care reform bill, has bipartisan support, though it never had enough backing to pass the House or Senate on its own.

On page 768 of the House bill, the language calls for "Optional Coverage of Nurse Home Visitation Services," which would aim to improve the health of pregnant women and their children under the age of 2 by "increasing birth intervals between pregnancies," curbing child abuse and "improving family stability" by reducing domestic violence and crime.

President Barack Obama called for the creation of the program in his budget proposal, delivered to Congress earlier this year, and he gave it a $124 million price tag for the first year.

House Democrats left the language out of the annual health and education spending bill and instead inserted it into their sweeping $1 trillion health care reform bill.

The language has given opponents of that bill more ammunition with which to label the legislation a giant leap toward socialism.

"The federal government doesn't hold the key to parenting success, and creating a new home visitation program would further increase the federal role in preschool education," wrote Linsey Burke, of the Heritage Foundation. "Just one more reason for parents to be concerned about what's actually in the health care bill."

Support for the language is based on studies that show home visitation to low-income families has many benefits, including improved prenatal health, reduction in cigarette smoking, and fewer injuries to young children.

The studies, conducted by the Denver-based Nurse-Family Partnership also found that the visits led to "fewer unintended subsequent pregnancies, and increases in intervals between first and second births."

Some opponents of the language fear this could lead to abortion counseling.

Darrell West, a governance studies scholar at the Brookings Institution, a Washington, D.C., think tank, said lawmakers will have a hard time explaining such aspects of the bill until Congress settles on one piece of legislation from the various plans that are now under consideration.

"Opponents are assuming the worst possible motivations and so they are taking innocuous language and twisting into something that sounds absolutely terrible," West said. "Democrats have to confront those fears and explain what the reality is."

sferrechio@washingtonexaminer.com



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Da Bear

Aug 13, 2009

So Mrs. Jones, as part of the Child Safety Act of 2009, we need to ask you how many firearms do have in the house? Are they all legally registered, and properly stored? Do you know that since a few children are killed in firearm accidents each year, you must surrender your firearms, or surrender you child to a Foster home? By keeping firearms you are endangering your kids and we therefore will determine you are an unfit parent,

Do you have any knives in the house? Do you listen to AM radio stations?

 

not the enemy

Aug 13, 2009

The purpose of this section is to help mothers with young children, or newborns. These are woman that are usually single, in bad situations. It is very common for these visitations in Europe already, and mothers that use the service are usually very thankful for the help. These nanny-type workers will come and do light chores, and help with your children. It is not the government telling you how to parent, it is the government helping young mothers stay sane, and to help with early childhood development, which is vital.

 

not the enemy

Aug 13, 2009

The phrase "Home Visitation" is very misleading in this context. It is not the government coming and checking in on you, its a service, not an inspection.

 

Motivations

Aug 13, 2009

The problem here is it sounds like these visitations are compulsory. Do you sign up somewhere for some help or do they just show up at your door? It reads like they just show up. The wording is JUST vague enough to allow room later on for this rule to be manipulated into government control.

 

StepIntoTheLight

Aug 13, 2009

As I make my way through reading HR3200, the more disturbed I am the way this Administration wants to claw its way into my everyday life through its power-grab of my individual rights.

Read the bills, and learn more about what your legislators are REALLY doing with ObamaCare. You will join the opposition pretty quickly!

 

Compassionate & Right of Center

Aug 20, 2009

While the wording in the bill is vague, the program is based on the bipartisan supported, top-tier evidence-based Nurse Family Partnership model. It is a voluntary service available to low-income mothers that is effective and actually saves society money but helping families and kids stay off drugs, public assistance and out of jail. Rather than waiting for parents to abuse their children the service removes the stress faced by parents in poverty. It works so well that countries that have had home-visiting services for years are adopting and testing it for their cultures. This may be the only sensible piece of the whole bill.

http://evidencebasedprograms.org/wordpress/?page_id=57

http://www.cabinetoffice.gov.uk/social_exclusion_task_force/family_nurse_partnership.aspx

 


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