Public Health Without WIC?
Lets try to follow this logic:
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Pennsylvania receives a $400 million annual windfall from
the national tobacco settlement agreement;
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Governor Ridge commits the entire amount to making Pennsylvanians
healthier; and
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As the money is divided up, our very best public health program
for low-income women and children is left out of the discussion.
Bizarre? You bet! But thats just what has happened in Harrisburg
over the course of the past year. The PA Association of WIC Directors
met with the Governors staff and Department of Health officials
last June 23rd to present their case for a small share
of the tobacco funds. And that was the end of that! A proven program
that saves about $2.50 in medical costs for each dollar spent
didnt even get to first base.
Why not? Part of the problem is that the Department of Health,
which administers WIC, failed to go to bat for it. Part of the
problem is that the Governors proposal leaves no room for
"the little guys" to compete for funds. And part of the problem
is that policymakers have ignored the fact that WIC works for
healthy babies by encouraging pregnant women to stop smoking!
Meanwhile many WIC programs are struggling through a second consecutive
year of budget cuts. Bev Wilson, Director of the WIC Program in
York County, has seen her budget shrink by 15 percent since 1998.
Many of her costs are fixed and Wilson is determined not to close
satellite offices. Her only choices are staff reductions (five
positions, a 20 percent cut) and low wages ($5.70 an hour for
high school graduates, $9.18 an hour for nurses and dieticians).
Is this any way to run Pennsylvanias finest public health
program?
Joyce Dodge, Director of the WIC Program in Allegheny
County, reports difficulties similar to those experienced in York
County. Because of funding reductions, Dodge has cut staff by
25 percent over the past three years and can afford to pay newly
hired professional dieticians only $17,000 annually. Supervisory
WIC staff in Allegheny County havent had a raise in three
years, and Dodge has been forced to close neighborhood offices.
Statewide Pennsylvanias federal funding for WICs
health and nutrition services dropped by $1 million (about 3 percent)
in 1999. This year about half of that was restored, but current
funding is still $500,000 below the 1998 level. During that time
total WIC participation has fallen by 8 percent. But that decrease
was almost entirely in the number of children served. The number
of infants in the program, and the number of pregnant and breastfeeding
women, is virtually unchanged over the past five years.
Theres lots of good stuff in the Governors plan:
tobacco prevention and cessation (15 percent); a health insurance
plan for the uninsured (40 percent); expanded community-based
services for older adults (15 percent); research (10 percent);
health care-related economic development (5 percent); and an endowment
(5 percent). But theres no room for WIC.
The best hope at this point appears to be SB 1270, authored by
Senator Tim Murphy (R-Allegheny County). It would divide tobacco
settlement funds four ways: health insurance for the uninsured
(20 percent); health research (20 percent); an endowment (15 percent);
and regional health boards (45 percent). The regional health boards
would allocate the funds based on an assessment of local needs
and priorities. Among those priorities would be the promotion
of practices to manage and reduce high-risk pregnancies and premature
births.
This years allocation of the tobacco settlement funds will
create the pattern for allocations in future years. The final
plan, which will be adopted in May, should include space for WIC
to compete. Readers are encouraged to contact their representatives
with the message: make room for WIC.
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