ABOUT US
Finding Common
Ground (FCG) is a collaborative effort between
researchers at Columbia
University's Mailman School of Public Health and Boston
Medical Center. The project is dedicated to developing
a public health agenda that integrates the healthcare needs
and rights of women and children, and to reframing public
discourse so that advocacy for one is seen to benefit both.
Most recently, Finding Common Ground
in the Era of Welfare Reform has been examining
these issues in the context of the dramatic policy shifts
that comprise "welfare reform." Despite various evaluations
of welfare reform currently underway by others, this project
is the only one to focus on the consequences for women's
reproductive and child health. The importance of the PRWORA
to the social well-being of millions of American families
makes such evaluation necessary despite its complexity.
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Project overview
Welfare
Reform
The welfare reform law of 1996 mandated
work requirements and lifetime time limits on income assistance
for poor families with children, administratively separated
Medicaid from TANF, and "devolved" considerable autonomy
to the states to shape their own policies and programs.
While the states were constrained by the broad parameters
of the federal legislation (ceilings such as 5-year lifetime
limits and work requirements after 2 years), they were free
to further restrict benefits and to impose behavioral requirements
on recipients through reductions or termination of benefits.
Consequently, there are now more than 50 state and county
versions of welfare reform.
Our
Approach
Since 1997, the Finding
Common Ground project has focused on assessing
whether federal and state welfare reform policies have had
an impact on the health and well-being of poor women and
children. In particular, we have paid attention to the state
policy choices related to reproductive and maternal behaviors,
such as requiring childhood immunizations, pediatric medical
visits, family planning counseling, and family caps. Toward
this end, we have taken a multipronged research approach,
including assembling a multidisciplinary Advisory
Committee; conducting two national
surveys of state agencies Child Protective Services
(CPS) and Maternal and Child Health (MCH) that interact
with TANF and are important players in the health arena
for women and children; delineating reproductive and infant
health indicators that might be sensitive to welfare policies,
and potential data sources to assess this impact; analyzing
the relation between changes in cash
assistance, Medicaid and uninsurance; and conducting
in-depth state case
studies to further examine the impact of states' welfare
policy choices on health, and to establish collaborative
arrangements for data collection and analysis at the state
level. The timing of this undertaking is critical with the
welfare reform law due for reauthorization in 2002.
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Advisory Committee
The FCG Advisory Committee comprises
experts from various disciplines within the fields of health
and social policy. Drawn from the local, state and national
levels, the committee provides a comprehensive perspective
that continually informs our research and activities.
Hani
Atrash, MD, MPH
Chief, Pregnancy and Infant Health Branch
Division of Reproductive Health
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Deborah
Bell
Executive Director of Professional Staff Congress
The City University of New York
Paula
Braverman, MD, MPH
Professor of Family and Community Medicine
University of California at San Francisco
Vicki
Breitbart, EdD
Associate Vice President
Clinical Services
Planned Parenthood of New York City
Martha
Davis, JD
Legal Director
NOW Legal Defense and Education Fund
Sally
Fogerty, BSN, MEd
Assistant Commissioner
Massachusetts Department of Public Health
Fernando
A. Guerra, MD, MPH
Director of Health
San Antonio Metropolitan District
Grant
Higginson, MD, MPH
State Health Officer
Oregon Health Division
Deborah
Klein Walker, EdD
Associate Commissioner
Massachusetts Department of Public Health
Jodie
Levin-Epstein
Senior Policy Analyst
Center for Law and Social Policy
Velvet
Miller, PhD
My Parents Concierge, Trenton NJ
Broker service for adult children and their elder relatives
Mary
Murphree, PhD
Regional Administrator
Women's Bureau, Region II
For Identification Purposes Only
Julius
Richmond, MD
Professor of Health Policy Emeritus
Harvard Medical School
Allan
Rosenfield, MD
Delamar Professor and Dean
Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University
Benjamin
P. Sachs, MD
Chief, Ob-Gyn Department and Professor
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
Harvard Medical School & School of Public Health
Deborah
Smith, MD
Assistant Professor, Ob-Gyn
Howard University Hospital
Barry
Zuckerman, MD
Chief of Pediatrics
Boston Medical Center
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Faculty
and staff
FCG includes researchers from Columbia
University and Boston Medical Center. They represent the
fields of public health, obstetrics/gynecology, pediatrics,
sociomedical sciences, statistics, and public policy.
Principal
Investigators
Wendy
Chavkin MD, MPH
Co-Principal Investigator and Professor
wc9@columbia.edu
Wendy Chavkin is the Co-Principal Investigator
of the project and is a Professor of Clinical and Public
Health and Obstetrics & Gynecology at Columbia University.
For over two decades, Dr. Chavkin's research has focused
on testing, prevention, perinatal transmission and policy
in pregnancies with HIV; policy and treatment in pregnancies
with drug abuse; abortion, including policy and medical
education; surveillance, planning and assessment of services
for maternal and child health.
Dr. Chavkin is Editor of the Journal
of the American Medical Women's Association and is an
Associate Contributing Editor for Women's Health for the
American Journal of Public Health.
Paul
Wise, MD, MPH
Co-Principal Investigator and Associate Professor
pwise@bu.edu
Co-Principal Investigator, Paul Wise, is
based in the Department of Pediatrics, Boston University
School of Medicine, the academic link for child health at
Boston Medical Center. At BMC, he is Director of Social
and Health Policy Research and Associate Professor of Pediatrics.
This department has a national reputation for leadership
in research advocacy and clinical service concerned with
issues related to poverty and underserved communities.
Staff
Diana
Romero, PhD, MA
Project Director
drr6@columbia.edu
Diana Romero serves as the project's director
and is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Population
and Family Health at Columbia University's Mailman School
of Public Health. Her research interests include social
policies related to health and poverty, and women's reproductive
health issues, particularly among low-income Hispanic and
African-American populations. Dr. Romero also is a medical
writer with several years experience writing and editing
publications on women's health and contraceptive technologies
in particular.
Lauren
Smith, MD, MPH
Investigator
lauren.smith@bmc.org
Lauren Smith is Medical Director of the
Pediatric Inpatient Unit at Boston Medical Center and an
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at the Boston University
School of Medicine. She completed her pediatric residency
and Chief Residency at Children's Hospital-Boston, and a
fellowship in general pediatrics at Boston Medical Center.
Dr. Smith's clinical and research activities primarily focus
on improving the health of underserved populations. She
recently received a Robert Wood Johnson Faculty Development
grant.
Liza
Camellerie, BA, BS
Project Coordinator
lc2075@columbia.edu
Liza Camellerie serves as Project Coordinator
for Finding Common Ground. She has extensive experience
in media and communications, having worked on socially oriented
programs at MTV and a PBS documentary on women's health
care in the United States. While in college, she worked
at the National Organization for Women on issues such as
Violence Against Women and the Equity in Prescription and
Contraceptive Coverage Acts. Ms. Camellerie received Bachelor's
degrees in American Studies and Communications.
Julia
Jung Choe, BA
Project Coordinator
jjc2004@columbia.edu
Julia Choe is a Masters student in Population
and Family Health at Columbia University's Mailman School
of Public Health and serves as Project Coordinator for Finding
Common Ground. Prior to her graduate study, Ms. Choe conducted
extensive sociological and clinical research on the health
of San Francisco drug users and women. She has mentored
and tutored elementary school aged children in San Francisco,
and continues this work with teens in NYC. She plans to
continue working in public health as an adolescent health
educator.
Barbara
Pastrana, MD
Research Assistant
bap2001@columbia.edu
Barbara Pastrana is a graduate student
in the Population and Family Health Program at Columbia
University's Mailman School of Public Health. Before pursuing
her studies in the United States, Dr. Pastrana was the head
physician at a rural community clinic in her native Mexico.
After completing her Masters degree, she will continue to
focus on improving maternal and child health care, both
at the patient and community levels.
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Key
Support
The Finding Common Ground project
has received support from a variety of sources, including
private foundations and government agencies:
Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention
Ford
Foundation
Human Development and Reproductive Health Unit
General
Service Foundation
Reproductive Health and Rights
Maternal
and Child Health Bureau
A cooperative agreement with HRSA through
the Association
of Schools of Public Health
Office
of Population Affairs
Open
Society Institute-NY
Reproductive Rights Program
The
Moriah Fund
Population and Reproductive Health
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Presentations
The
FCG research staff have been presenting study activities
and findings to diverse audiences. The multidiciplinary
nature of the project requires that the most current information
on welfare reform policies and the health of women and children
be disseminated to a wide range of advocates, policymakers,
health care providers, welfare personnel, and other researchers.
Below
is a list of presentations by Finding Common Ground staff.
Slide materials from more recent presentations may be available
to download if this symbol (+) appears next to the citation.
"Violence,
Substance Abuse, and Mental Health Among Poor Women: Relevance
Within the Context of Welfare Reform." Trapped
by Poverty/Trapped by Abuse Conference, Ann Arbor, Michigan,
October 28, 2001.
"Unwoven
Tapestries: History of the Women's Health Movement."
Health, Law and Human Rights: Exploring the Connections.
American Society of Law, Medicine and Ethics (ASLME) Conference.
Philadelphia, PA September 29-October 1, 2001.
"State
of Welfare Reform Policies, Medicaid Declines, and Increased
Uninsurance." Maternal, Infant, and Child Health
Epidemiology (MICHEP) Workshop, Atlanta, GA, December 12-13,
2000.
"Welfare
Reform and Women's and Children's Health: State Case Studies."
Maternal, Infant, and Child Health Epidemiology (MICHEP)
Workshop, Atlanta, GA, December 12-13, 2000.
"Welfare
Reform Policies and Maternal and Child Health Services:
Findings from a National Study." American Public
Health Association annual meeting, Boston, MA, November
13, 2000.
"Women's
Reproductive Health in a "Reformed" Welfare System." American
Public Health Association annual meeting, Boston, MA, November
14, 2000.
"National
and State-Level Welfare Reform Developments and the Health
of Women and Children." Presentation for staff
at the San Antonio Metropolitan Health District, June 2000.
"Benefit
Use, Health Status and Household Hardship After Welfare
Reform Among Families with Chronically Ill Children."
Pediatric Academic Society annual meeting, Ambulatory Pediatric
Association, May 2000.
"Monitoring
the Impact of Welfare Reform on Women's Health." Association
of Maternal and Child Health Programs (AMCHP) annual meeting,
March 2000.
"Ending
Women's Poverty: A Report from the States."
Testimony at Congressional Staff Briefing, Washington, DC,
March 2000.
"Sex,
Reproduction, and Welfare Reform." Conference
entitled "To Promote the General Welfare: Ending Women's
Poverty." Hosted by NOW-LDEF and Georgetown University,
Washington, DC, March 2000.
"The
Implications of Changing Federal Welfare Policy for the
Health of Women and Children." CUNY Urban Health
Colloquium, NY, NY, March 2000.
"Women's
and Children's Health in a 'Reformed' Welfare System: The
Paradox of Denying Aid to Mothers while Trying to Safeguard
their Children." Work, Welfare and Politics
conference, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, February 2000.
Presentation for NYS Family Planning Advocates
annual legislative conference, workshop entitled
"Welfare Reform Revisited," Albany, NY,
February 2000.
"Tapping
TANF for Teen Pregnancy Prevention: A Working Session."
Hosted by CLASP and the National Campaign to Prevent
Teen Pregnancy, Washington, DC, January 2000.
"Welfare
Reform and Women's and Children's Health." Administration
for Children and Families (Region VI), conference entitled
"Dynamic Partnerships: Strategies for a New Millennium,"
Dallas, TX, January 2000.
"Welfare
Reform Policies and Maternal and Child Health Services:
Findings From a National Study," Maternal, Infant
and Child Health Epidemiology Workshop. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, December 1999.
"The
Impact of Welfare Reform Policies on Child Protective Services:
A National Study," Maternal, Infant and Child
Health Epidemiology Workshop. Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, December 1999.
"Welfare
Reform and Reproductive Freedom in NYS." Part
of a three-part seminar entitled "Exploring the Economics
of Reproductive Freedom." Hosted by Urban Justice Center,
New York, NY, September-October 1999.
"Exploring
the Economics of Reproductive Freedom." Meeting
sponsored by the Urban Justice Center, New York, NY. October
13, 1999.
"Health
Sector Reform: The US Picture." Annual meeting
of the Affinity Group on Population, Reproductive Health
and Rights. Annapolis, MD, October 3, 1999.
"Welfare
Reform: Chronic Child Illness and Employment Among Welfare
Recipients." Pediatric Academic Society annual
meeting, Ambulatory Pediatric Association, San Francisco,
CA, May 1999.
"Knowledge
of Welfare Reform Among Families with Chronically Ill Children."
Pediatric Academic Society annual meeting, Ambulatory Pediatric
Association, San Francisco, CA, May 1999.
"Child
Care After Welfare Reform." Meeting entitled,
"Healthy Child Care America: Quality Child Care in
the Millennium." Hosted by the Child Care Bureau and
Maternal and Child Health Bureau, US Department of Health
and Human Resources, Rockville, MD, May 22, 1999.
Invited discussant in health policy seminar
on the "Family Health Initiative."
Hosted by the Maternal and Child Health Bureau, Health Resources
and Services Administration (Peter C. van Dyck). Washington,
DC, May 14, 1999.
"Improving
Maternal and Pregnancy Outcomes." Healthy People
2000 Progress Review for Maternal and Infant Health. (Live
broadcast) US Department of Health and Human Services. Washington,
DC, May 5, 1999.
"The
Impact of Welfare Reform on Women and Children."
School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University,
Women in International and Public Affairs spring policy
conference. New York, NY, April 20, 1999.
"The
Impact of Welfare Reform Policies on Child Protective Services:
A National Study." Taylor Institute/University
of Michigan Trapped by Poverty, Trapped by Abuse conference.
Ann Arbor, MI, April, 1999.
Invited discussant in meeting on "Changes
in the Welfare Law." Hosted by Women's Bureau,
US Department of Labor (Mary Murphree) and US Department
of Health and Human Services (E. Lower-Basch). New York,
NY, March 19, 1999.
"Welfare
Reform: How Is It Affecting the Health and Well-Being of
Children?" Annual Grantmakers in Health meeting
on Health Philanthropy: Social inequalities in Health. Tempe,
AZ, February 1999.
"Welfare
Reform: How to Measure the Effects of Welfare Reform on
MCH." Maternal, Infant and Child Health Epidemiology
Workshop. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta,
GA, December 1998.
"Finding
Common Ground in the Era of Welfare Reform and Medicaid
Managed Care," Fall Seminar Series, Center for
Population and Family Health, Joseph L. Mailman School of
Public Health, Columbia University, September 1998.
Implications
of the New National Adoption Legislation for Women in the
Context of Welfare Reform," Abandoned Infants
Association National Conference, May 1998.
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RESEARCH
Overview
Since the passage of the Personal Responsibility
Work Opportunity and Reconciliation Act (PRWORA) in 1996,
the Finding Common Ground project has focused on
investigating the potential impact of federal and state
welfare reform policies on the health and well-being of
poor women and children. In particular, we have paid attention
to the state policy choices related to reproductive and
maternal behaviors.
To
learn more about each of our projects, please choose from
the list on your left.
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National surveys
FCG
surveyed state directors of Child Protective Services (CPS)
to assess the effect of state welfare reform policies on
child protective services. We also conducted a survey of
state directors of Maternal and Child Health (MCH) services
to assess the impact of TANF regulations on policies and
programs specifically addressing women's and children's
health.
Child Protective
Services Survey
This
survey, administered via phone inverviews with state directors
of Child Protective Services (CPS), sought to document whether
changes in state welfare policies have had an impact on
child protective services.
Maternal and Child Health Survey
To
assess the impact of TANF regulations on policies and programs
specifically addressing women's and children's health, we
surveyed state directors of Maternal and Child Health (MCH)
services. Some of the topic areas explored in the survey
include: children's health and child care; maternal and
women's health; adolescent health; Medicaid, CHIP and other
assistance programs; immigrants and domestic violence.
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State case
studies
To more fully understand the factors
contributing to women's and children's health outcomes,
Finding Common Ground is conducting in-depth state
case studies in select states. Involving both qualitative
and quantitative
components, these case studies will provide a rich understanding
of how specific welfare policies intersect with areas such
as health insurance, food assistance, and child care.
Qualitative Research
The qualitative component of the state
case studies involves conducting in-depth semistructured
interviews with directors of various agencies (e.g., TANF,
Medicaid, CPS, Food Stamps, child care) to learn about both
the policy perspective and actual implementation procedures.
We also interview health care providers, advocacy groups,
and safety-net providers (e.g., community-based organizations
and advocacy groups). Through interviews with such state
policymakers and administrators, we can gain an in-depth
understanding of the nature of the interaction among agencies,
as well as programmatic issue encountered by welfare clients.
Quantitative Research
The
quantitative component, currently in the planning stage,
consists of two main parts: secondary data analysis and
primary data collection. We are carrying out data linkages
with TANF, Medicaid, vital statistics and health outcomes
data, to the extent possible, in order to identify any changes
in trends since welfare reform was implemented. The second
part of the quantitative research protocol consists of primary
data collection in pediatric health clinics. Here we will
collect information from mothers of chronically ill children
to ascertain if they or their children have experienced
changes in their health status, or utilization of health
services since these policies took effect.
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TANF and uninsurance
Based on an analysis of data collected
in all 50 states, Finding Common Ground found that
certain state TANF policies were associated with increases
in uninsurance and declines in Medicaid. Specifically, states
with policies to deter people from enrolling in TANF
had greater increases in uninsurance and steeper drops in
Medicaid enrollment than states without such policies.
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Extant
Data Set Analyses
To answer the complex questions about
the effect of welfare reform policies on women's and children's
health, Finding Common Ground will conduct quantitative
analyses of extant data sets. Our research questions will
focus on the potential impact of TANF policies on: (1) health
care access and utilization (including safety-net providers)
and (2) health outcomes among women and children.
Specific questions that we seek to address
include the following:
1) Access to health
services utilization of health services: Has the
proportion with health insurance changed in the welfare-eligible
population? Has the recent increase in uninsurance resulted
in a change in health care utilization by poor women and
children? Are specific health services being over- or underutilized
since welfare reform too affect?
(2) Health outcomes:
What has been the impact on the health of women and
children? Has there been an increase or decrease in certain
conditions that may be sensitive to changes in health-care
utilization, such as preterm delivery, asthma.
Our Approach to
These Questions
We will first utilize public-use data,
including vital statistics and national surveys (e.g., Surveys
of Program Dynamics, National Health Interview Survey, National
Hospital Discharge Survey, Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring
Survey (PRAMS),); that permit state-based analyses. We will
work closely with state and local agencies to identify efficient
mechanisms to link these datasets in ways that provide new
insights into relationships between welfare and health.
Of special interest are linkages between TANF participation
and health service utilization data sets, including hospital
discharge and Medicaid. Other candidate datasets for linkage
include family planning, abortion, child protective services,
and other maternal and child health program data.
We think it likely that the assessment
of welfare's effects on health will require a series of
analyses based on different data sources. These pilot efforts
will demonstrate which methods and indicators are most promising
for assessing welfare reform's impact on reproductive and
infant health indicators.
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Clinical surveys
Based on an analysis of data collected
in all 50 states, Finding Common Ground found that
certain state TANF policies were associated with increases
in uninsurance and declines in Medicaid. Specifically, states
with policies to deter people from enrolling in TANF
had greater increases in uninsurance and steeper drops in
Medicaid enrollment than states without such policies.
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Reproduction/infant
parameters
We reviewed existing national, state and
other data collection sources to delineate which available
health indicators might be sensitive to welfare policies,
as well as limitations related to the data sources and methodological
constraints..
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PUBLICATIONS
The projects listed below vary greatly
in size and scope: some are at the district or provincial
level, others are national. All begin with needs assessments,
which show in stark relief the lack of life-saving services
for women. The findings are then translated into detailed
project plans with governments and the medical community.
Recent Papers
Romero D, Chavkin W, Wise PH, Smith L,
Wood P. Welfare to Work? Impact on Maternal Health on Employment.
American Journal of Public Health. In press.
Chavkin W, Wise PH, Romero D. The Data
Are In: Health Matters in Welfare Policy. American Journal
of Public Health. In press.
Wise PH, Wampler N, Romero D, Chavkin W.
Chronic Illness Among Poor Children Enrolled in the Temporary
Assistance to Needy Families (TANF) Program. American
Journal of Public Health. In press.
Smith L, Romero D, Wood P, Wampler N, Chavkin
W, Wise PH. Child health employment barriers among welfare
recipients and applicants with chronically ill children.
American Journal of Public Health. 2002; 57 (3).
In press.
Maine D, Chavkin W. Maternal Mortality:
Global Similarities and Differences. Journal of the American
Medical Women's Association. In press.
Pati S, Romero D, Chavkin W. Changes in
Utilization of Health Insurance and Food Assistance Programs
in Medically Underserved Communities in the Era of Welfare
Reform: An Urban Study. American Journal of Public Health.
In press.
Wood P, Smith L, Romero D, Bradshaw P,
Wise P, Chavkin W. Children with Asthma: The Relationship
Between Welfare Status, Health Insurance Status and Child
Health. American Journal of Public Health. In press.
Chavkin W, Wise PH, Romero D. Welfare,
Women, and Children: It's Time for Doctor's to Speak Out.
Journal of the American Medical Women's Association.
2002; 57 (1): 3-4. Editorial.
Chavkin, W. Sex, Lies, and Silence: Reproductive
Health in a Hostile Environment. American Journal of
Public Health. 2001; 91 (11): 1739-1741.
Romero D, Chavkin W, Wise PH, Hess C, VanLandeghem
K. State welfare reform policies and maternal and child
health services: A national study. Maternal and Child
Health Journal. 2001;5(3):199-206.
Chavkin W, Romero D, Wise PH. State welfare
reform policies and declines in health insurance. American
Journal of Public Health. 2000;90:900-908.
Chavkin W, Draut T, Romero D, Wise PH.
Sex, reproduction and welfare reform. Georgetown Journal
on Poverty Law and Policy. 2000;7(2):1-11.
Romero D, Chavkin W, Wise PH. The impact
of welfare reform policies on child protective services:
A national study. Journal of Social Issues. 2000;56(4):799-810.
Smith L, Wise PH, Chavkin W, Romero D,
Zuckerman B. Implications of welfare reform for child health:
emerging challenges for clinical practice and policy. Pediatrics.
2000;106(5):1117-25.
Wise PH, Chavkin W, Romero D. Assessing
the effects of welfare reform policies on reproductive and
infant health. American Journal of Public Health.
1999;89:1514-1521.
Chavkin W. What's a mother to do? welfare,
work, and family. American Journal of Public Health.
1999;89:477-479. Editorial.
Chavkin W, Wise PH, Elman D. Welfare reform
and women's health. American Journal of Public Health.
1998;88:1017-1018.
Chavkin W, Elman D, Wise PH. Mandatory
testing of pregnant women and newborns: HIV, drug use and
welfare policy. Fordham Urban Law Journal. 1998;24(4):749-755.
Chavkin W. Policies towards pregnancy and
addiction: sticks without carrots. In Harvey JA, Kosofsky
BE, eds. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.
1998;846:335-340.
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Policy briefs
DOCTORS SPEAK OUT
Endorsements
Download
PDF
Executive Summary
Download PDF
Agenda
Download PDF
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LINKS
Below is a list of web sites that contain
information concerning welfare reform.
Organizations
AJPH
Center
for Law and Social Policy
Child
Trends
General
Service Foundation
JAMWA
Kaiser
Family Foundation
National
Governor's Association
NCCP
NOW
Legal Defense and Education Fund
State
Policy Documentation Project
The
Ford Foundation
The
Open Society Institute-NY
The
Urban Institute
Welfare
Information Network
Government Agencies
Administration
for Children and Families
Center
for Disease Control and Prevention
Department
of Health and Human Services
Health
Care Financing Administration
Health
Resources and Services Administration
Maternal
and Child Health Bureau
Office
of Population Affairs