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David Stanley Ford

Autism coverage in Oklahoma stripped from bill
Lawmaker says families will suffer

BY JULIE BISBEE    Comments Comment on this article4
Published: April 22, 2009

An amendment to a bill that would have offered insurance to children with autism has been deleted, dashing the hopes of advocates who had been lobbying for the idea.

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Last week, the Senate unanimously approved an amendment to a House bill that would include coverage for children under the Oklahoma Health Insurance High Risk Pool.

The pool was created by the Legislature in 1995 to provide insurance to residents unable to get individual coverage. Participants still pay a premium.

Two bills, one from the House and one from the Senate, sought to create a state license for certified behavior analysts and increase training for therapists who would evaluate and diagnose autism-spectrum disorders.

Because there were two versions of the bill, it went to conference committee of House and Senate members. When the bill was sent back to the Senate for approval, an amendment to offer insurance was removed.

"What the Senate did is just flat wrong,” Sen. Jay Paul Gumm, D-Durant, said after the vote.

Gumm, who has pushed for health insurance coverage for children with autism in a bill dubbed "Nick’s Law,” said without insurance, many families won’t be able to afford treatment from the newly certified therapists.

"This bill has done nothing to ease the pressure on the families,” Gumm said. "This bill is for folks who stood up and said ‘absolutely not’ to Nick’s Law to be able to say, ‘I did something.’”

Sen. Ron Justice, the Senate author of the bill, said the measure begins to address treatment of autism in Oklahoma.

The bill passed the Senate with a vote of 40-6.

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David Stanley Ford





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This is just another way to protect state employees and other people who work in long-term care facilities. They are giving them job security. Keeping people with autism from learning how to adapt will surely provoke need for long term care.
Sheri - Apr 25, 2009 at 11:33 pm
Jamie-you know the really pathetic part of all of this? Probably nothing will get funded even if it is a worthless bill created only to boost the approval ratings for the digusting manner in which republican leadership has treated these children. Robyne Rohde
---, Oklahoma City - Apr 23, 2009 at 6:48 pm
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I know I for one can't wait for all these new therapists to come to Oklahoma so my kid can get treatment....oh wait. The treatment is as much as $5,000 and my insurance company doesn't cover the treatment. Most insurance companies don't cover the treatment and last time I checked most people who have kids with Autism arent' wealthy. So, it seems to me the House and Senate are just trying to make it look like the give a rat's butt about our kids when truthfully all they really care about is getting elected and taking bribes from big insurance. Thanks for nothing guys. Can't wait for the next election when I get to vote my opinion again.
Jamie, Yukon - Apr 22, 2009 at 1:10 pm
Sleezebag money mongering legislature. Bet none of them have any sick kids.
James, Oklahoma City - Apr 22, 2009 at 5:32 am

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