Florida pledges better
health care for poor children to settle lawsuit
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[April 06, 2016]
(Reuters) - Florida officials will boost access to health and
dental care for poor children in settlement of an 11-year-old
class-action lawsuit, the groups behind the legal action said on
Tuesday.
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The lawsuit, filed in 2005, accused Florida officials of failing to
pay doctors enough for treating 2 million children with
government-supported health coverage, adding that this discouraged
physicians from providing their services.
The settlement calls for Florida to increase payments to physicians
who treat poor children and sets benchmarks for preventative and
dental treatment to be met over five years, according to the
Philadelphia-based Public Interest Law Center, which represented the
plaintiffs.
Florida health officials and attorneys for the plaintiffs, among
them the Florida chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics, were
ordered to negotiate a settlement after a U.S. district judge in
December 2014 found Florida fell short of federal standards for
providing healthcare to poor children.

Nearly 80 percent of children with government-supported healthcare
in Florida were never able to see a dentist, the judge said in his
ruling.
The agreement marks a "significant step forward in improving access
to medical care" for poor children in Florida, Tommy Schechtman,
president of the Florida chapter of the American Academy of
Pediatrics, said in a statement.
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An official of the Florida Agency for Healthcare Administration
could not be reached for comment late on Tuesday.
The settlement must still get final approval from a judge.
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles; Editing by Clarence
Fernandez)
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