Georgia health insurance for children
Filed under: Child Health Insurance, Low Income Health Insurance
Reader question:
I need Georgia health insurance for my three year old daughter. Is this available in my state?
Amber
Great question.
All states, of course, have Medicaid, which is a federal program, but naturally Medicaid does not cover everybody who needs health insurance. Although the income requirements for it are a little more loose than for other welfare programs, there are many people who make too much to qualify, but at the same time make too little to get a family health insurance plan with their own money. These people are locked in a dilemma, because they need to get child health insurance for their kids, as well as for themselves.
Georgia health insurance offers the PeachCare program for child health insurance to cover those kids whose parents make too much to be able to get Medicaid. This comes with coverage as extensive as that of Medicaid itself, from things like hospital stays and emergency room visits, to things like prescriptions and eyeglasses and dental appointments. It provides basically everything you need to protect your child’s health throughout his or her lifetime with this Georgia health insurance plan.
It isn’t free, though, but it is a whole lot cheaper than normal child health insurance. Every month there is a cost of about ten to thirty five dollars for each child over the age of five. There is a maximum cost of seventy dollars per month, per family, though, so if you have five children over five you won’t be paying that total. To find out more about this kind of Georgia health insurance, you can go to the state’s PeachCare website for more information.
One of the drawbacks is that, unlike most health insurance plans, which will cover a child until he or she has completed college, PeachCare ends once the child reaches the age of nineteen, whether they are still going to school or not.
Cheers,
Fashun Guadarrama.
