Policy Basics
Government Structure
I Make Money Moves (Appropriations)
Emergency Preparedness Law
Maternal & Child Health
100

Rules, laws, or actions that government takes to address a public issue fall under this term.

What is a policy?

100

These three branches make up the U.S. federal government. 

What are the legislative, executive, and judicial branches?

100

This is the annual process where Congress decides how to spend federal money. 

What is appropriations?

100

What does ASPR stand for?

What is the Administration for Strategic Preparedness & Response?

100

This provides health coverage to eligible children through both Medicaid and separate CHIP programs

What is Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP)?

200

Before a bill becomes a federal law, it must be passed by this group.

What is Congress?

200

This body of government has 435 elected representatives.

What is the House of Representatives?

200

These committees in the House and Senate are responsible for writing the bills that fund the government.

What are the Appropriations Committees?

200

The primary disaster relief agency in the United States, coordinating the federal response to disasters that receive a presidential declaration. 

What is Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)?

200

This federal hotline provides 24/7 free, confidential support for moms experiencing mental health challenges.

What is the Maternal Mental Health Hotline?

300

This major federal health law, passed in 2010, let states expand Medicaid to cover more people. 

What is the Affordable Care Act? 

300

The executive branch is headed by this person.

What is the President of the United States?

300

This is the other major category of spending besides discretionary, covering programs like Medicaid and Social Security.

What is mandatory spending?

300

This federal law allows the President to declare a state emergency, usually at the request of a governor, which unlocks FEMA disaster assistance and other federal support for that state.

What is the Stafford Act?

300

During COVID-19, many MCH home visiting programs used this format to continue care while limiting virus exposure. 

What is virtual home visiting?

400

If a state wants to change how they run Medicaid, they might apply for this type of federal permission. 

What is a waiver?

400

A higher authority of law will displace the law of a lower authority of law when the two authorities come into conflict.

What is preemption?

400

If Congress doesn’t pass a budget by the deadline, they might use one of these to keep the government running temporarily.

What is a continuing resolution?

400

This is the name of the national strategy required under the Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness Act to guide the U.S. response to public health emergencies.

What is the National Health Security Strategy?

400

This type of Medicaid waiver allows states to test new ways of delivering and paying for health care services, including for MCH populations.

What is a Section 1115 waiver?

500

This clause in the Constitution says that federal law takes priority over state law.

What is the Supremacy Clause?

500

The number of elected U.S. Senators

What is 100? 

500

This is the term for government funding that gets renewed every year through legislation

What is discretionary spending? 

500

In 2020, President Trump used this authority to declare a national emergency concerning the Covid-19 pandemic. 

What is the National Emergencies Act?

500

This emergency preparedness toolkit, developed by ASPR, helps states and local agencies plan for the unique needs of pregnant people, postpartum individuals, and children during disasters.

What is the HHS Maternal-Child Health
Emergency Planning Toolkit?

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