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HHS
Approves State Plans To Insure Women With Breast Or Cervical Cancer HHS
Secretary Tommy G. Thompson approved the first three states' proposals to expand
Medicaid benefits to uninsured women who are diagnosed with breast or cervical
cancer through a federal screening program. Maryland,
New Hampshire and West Virginia are the first three states to take advantage of
the federal Breast and Cervical Cancer Prevention and Treatment Act (BCCPT) that
was signed into law in October 2000. The
law extends the full Medicaid benefit package to women who are screened and
found to need treatment through the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's
(CDC) National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program.
To qualify for the new program, women must be under age 65, not otherwise
eligible for Medicaid and without creditable health care coverage. Adoption
of coverage for women under the BCCPT is optional for states. However, states
that do offer the benefit will receive an enhanced matching rate for women who
enroll. "We
are taking bold action today to ensure that women who are fighting breast and
cervical cancer will get the help they need," Secretary Thompson said.
"This new program helps give states the flexibility they need to best serve
their citizens." Since
the CDC program began in 1990, more than 2.7 million breast and cervical cancer
screening tests have been provided to more than 1.7 million women.
Under the BCCPT law, these women may now be eligible for Medicaid
benefits for the duration of their cancer treatment. For
more information about this new optional program, go to www.hcfa.gov/medicaid/bccpthm.htm.
and www.cdc.gov/cancer/nbccedp/index.htm. Note:
All HHS press releases, fact sheets and other press materials are available at www.hhs.gov/news. |