The Mount Sinai Journal of Medicine

 

Volume 71 Number 3
May 2004
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CHIP: New Opportunities in Adolescent Health Care Delivery 186-190

Angela Diaz, M.D., Sharon Edwards, M.D., Wendy P. Neal, M.D., Pamela Ludmer, M.D., Jacalyn Bitterman, M.D., and Anne T. Nucci, M.D.

From the Division of Adolescent Medicine/Mount Sinai Adolescent Health Center, Department of Pediatrics, Mount Sinai Medical Center, New York, NY.

Address all correspondence to Angela Diaz, M.D., Director, Mount Sinai Adolescent Health Center, 320 East 94th Street, 2nd floor, New York, NY 10128; email: angela.diaz@msnyuhealth.org

Accepted for publication February 2004.

ABSTRACT
Children’s Health Insurance Programs (CHIP), usually targeted to infants, toddlers, and school-aged children, have been expanded to include adolescents. Adolescents need some form of health insurance in order to access needed care. Moreover, programs and services that provide them with health care must be adolescent-friendly, adolescent-focused and adolescent-sensitive, and include specialized training for primary care providers. Translating this philosophy into a successful health care delivery program involves addressing the psychological, institutional and financial barriers that make it difficult for adolescents to access health care. Overcoming these barriers, especially the financial ones, requires that primary care providers advocate for teenagers and take advantage of resources made available for them. CHIP provides a critical opportunity for policy-makers and health care providers to further improve adolescent health care and to more fully integrate adolescents into the health care system.

KEY WORDS
Adolescent health, CHIP, health insurance, ethics.


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