• Under that program, called the Low Income Health Program, counties could choose to adopt the Medicaid expansion early, increasing eligibility to the 138 percent threshold, in exchange for a 50 percent federal match on the cost. (mdcounties.org)
  • States can apply for a "State Plan Amendment" to expand family planning eligibility to the same eligibility as pregnancy related care through a state option rather than having to apply for a federal waiver. (wikipedia.org)
  • The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) aimed to strengthen the CHC network by increasing federal funds and expanding Medicaid eligibility. (bvsalud.org)
  • From the Wichita Eagle: "The plan expands eligibility for medical assistance to all adults who are under 65 and make less than 133 percent of the federal poverty level, or $16,611.70 for an individual… Expansion would begin Jan. 1, 2020. (canceradvocacy.org)
  • This is the third post in a series that offers an overview of action on the new state health insurance marketplaces, or exchanges, and expansion in eligibility for the Medicaid program. (commonwealthfund.org)
  • The expansion grants eligibility to many low-income adults who were previously excluded from the government-funded health care program. (hawaiipublicradio.org)
  • State expansions in Medicaid and CHIP eligibility for children offset a significant share of the gap in private coverage between Hispanic, Black, American Indian/Alaska Native, and White children. (kff.org)
  • In contrast, Medicaid eligibility for parents and other adults remains more limited. (kff.org)
  • Eligibility for Medicaid has been greatly expanded since the Affordable Care Act, with between 11 and 15 million currently covered by Medicaid expansion. (academyhealth.org)
  • There is no deadline, so states that have chosen to increase Medicaid eligibility are at varying stages of program expansion. (bestnotes.com)
  • Idaho, as of May 2019, is waiting for the federal government to accept the state's voter-approved plan to expand Medicaid eligibility. (bestnotes.com)
  • Because the mandate survives, the Court did not need to decide what other parts of the statute were constitutional, except for a provision that required states to comply with new eligibility requirements for Medicaid or risk losing their funding. (stanford.edu)
  • Expansion raises Medicaid eligibility for qualified adults up to 138% of the federal poverty level. (medpagetoday.com)
  • Expanding eligibility for public coverage of dental care was linked to reductions in racial and ethnic disparities in use of dental services, according to a recent analysis. (nih.gov)
  • The 2010 passage of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) expanded eligibility for Medicaid, a public health insurance program that assists Americans with limited income. (nih.gov)
  • To find out if the eligibility changes affected disparities in dental care, the scientists analyzed responses from a nationally representative survey that asks US adults about their health care, including their use of dental services. (nih.gov)
  • Among those adults who became newly eligible for Medicaid in 2014 based on income, the researchers compared responses from the three-year period before (2011-2013) and the five-year period after (2014-2018) states broadened eligibility. (nih.gov)
  • Our findings show that expanding eligibility for generous public coverage of dental care makes a difference in increasing use of dental services, and particularly in reducing racial and ethnic disparities," says Wehby. (nih.gov)
  • The ACA allowed states to expand eligibility for Medicaid to 138% of the federal poverty level, about $16,000 per year for a single person. (nih.gov)
  • In all, researchers analyzed data for nearly 368,000 patients, with about 119,000 living in states that had expanded Medicaid eligibility under the ACA. (nih.gov)
  • The researchers concluded that the ACA Medicaid expansion improved the quality of care, increased access to care, and, ultimately, reduced health care costs in states that chose to broaden eligibility. (nih.gov)
  • The ACA expanded coverage options through a Medicaid eligibility expansion to individuals earning ≤138% of the federal poverty level, which was implemented in over half of US states, and developed a health insurance marketplace and subsidies for some individuals to purchase private coverage. (cdc.gov)
  • Before this provision, Medicaid eligibility was very restrictive, and it was difficult to purchase individual health insurance plans. (cdc.gov)
  • Affordable Care Act's Medicaid Expansion. (cbpp.org)
  • As reported by Governing , the Governor of California has proposed an option for implementing the Affordable Care Act's Medicaid expansion by expanding the low-income insurance program on a county-by-county basis. (mdcounties.org)
  • This framework reminds me of the Affordable Care Act's Medicaid Expansion. (reason.com)
  • 2. Association of the Affordable Care Act's Medicaid Expansion With Care Quality and Outcomes for Low-Income Patients Hospitalized With Heart Failure. (nih.gov)
  • But expansion funding would run through the counties, counties would enroll newly eligible beneficiaries, etc. (mdcounties.org)
  • One provision expands the number of people eligible for Medicaid from those living under 100% of the federal poverty line to those living under 133% of the federal poverty line. (medscape.com)
  • On the other hand, not all children who are eligible for Medicaid are enrolled in the program. (medscape.com)
  • Adults with existing conditions became eligible to join a temporary high-risk pool, which will be superseded by the health care exchange in 2014. (wikipedia.org)
  • If you make less than about $18,754 if you are single, or less than about $38,295 as a family of four, you may be eligible for Medicaid . (webmd.com)
  • Eligible hospitals act now! (bricker.com)
  • In an email alert Monday, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) reminded eligible hospitals to take action by April 1 to avoid the 2015 payment adjustment under the Medicare EHR Incentive Program. (bricker.com)
  • These states allowed more people to be eligible for Medicaid. (cancer.org)
  • Blahous observed, "More money is being spent on the expansion population than on the historically eligible population. (thedailybeast.com)
  • The unique plan would send Medicaid-eligible patients onto private plans available through the state's exchange. (politico.com)
  • The federal government pays pays states' costs at 95% in 2017, declining to 90% in 2020 and later for new enrollees who became eligible due to Medicaid expansion. (homedialysis.org)
  • In Virginia, a study by Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) examined the prevalence of substance use disorder among uninsured Virginians and newly eligible Medicaid members. (bestnotes.com)
  • The division of state and federal responsibility for financing the cost of newly eligible enrollees, as outlined in the ACA, also helped to contain state Medicaid spending growth. (governing.com)
  • The federal government, which covered 58 percent of total Medicaid costs in 2013, committed to covering 100 percent of the bill for newly eligible enrollees (in those states that opted for expansion under the ACA) from 2014 to 2016, phasing down to 90 percent in 2020 and thereafter. (governing.com)
  • Prior to the ACA's launch in 2014, many low-income adults, particularly young adults and parents, either were not offered or could not afford private insurance and also were not eligible for Medicaid. (clasp.org)
  • As a result, many people became newly eligible for medical and dental coverage in states that adopted Medicaid expansions in 2014. (nih.gov)
  • The state's 120 legislators have been "really active on immigration and health care this year," she said. (socialworkers.org)
  • Voters in Montana, however, appeared to reject a proposal to raise taxes on tobacco and e-cigarettes to continue funding the state's expansion of Medicaid, which is set to sunset next year, leaving 100,000 Montanans at risk of losing coverage. (kbia.org)
  • Utah will pay for its share of expansion costs by increasing the state's sales tax by 0.15 percentage points to 4.85 percent, which works out to about 1.5 cents for every $10 residents spend on nonfood purchases. (kbia.org)
  • Our Scorecard ranks every state's health care system based on how well it provides high-quality, accessible, and equitable health care. (commonwealthfund.org)
  • Supporters of Medicaid expansion lug boxes of petitions to the Nebraska secretary of state's office Thursday. (hawaiipublicradio.org)
  • Overall, 9.4% of the state's population enrolled for coverage through Medicaid expansion. (healthleadersmedia.com)
  • Employment and student activities increased among Michigan Medicaid expansion enrollees, outpacing employment gains among the state's general population during the same time period. (academyhealth.org)
  • The study occurred prior to implementation of the state's Medicaid work requirement, which was in effect from January 1, 2020 until March 4, 2020, when a federal court halted the program . (academyhealth.org)
  • Little intends to use the fund for the state's Medicaid expansion. (bestnotes.com)
  • Supporters of Medicaid expansion include doctors, hospitals, business and faith leaders and most Democrats in the Legislature, who say the expansion will infuse nearly $1 billion in federal funding into the state's healthcare system each year, helping provide medical coverage to low-income Oklahomans who don't receive health insurance through work or who can't afford it. (modernhealthcare.com)
  • Montana's voters may also vote on a measure to extend their existing expansion, which is set to expire in 2019. (hawaiipublicradio.org)
  • Virginia has expanded Medicaid coverage, with enrollment beginning January 1, 2019. (bestnotes.com)
  • Avalere , a consulting firm based here, projected that about 325,000 people could gain Medicaid coverage in 2019 through expansion in Idaho, Nebraska, and Utah. (medpagetoday.com)
  • As for Montana, its Medicaid expansion began in 2015, but the state had passed a law stipulating that the program would have to be re-approved or it would end in 2019. (medpagetoday.com)
  • The Governor's proposal may require a waiver from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, if it is approved. (mdcounties.org)
  • The Affordable Care Act Medicaid Expansion Positively Impacted Community Health Centers and Their Patients. (bvsalud.org)
  • Community health centers (CHCs) provide primary care for underserved children and adults . (bvsalud.org)
  • Since the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) began encouraging states to apply for Section 1115 waivers to implement work requirements in Medicaid, ten states have had such waivers approved and ten other states have pending waiver applications with CMS. (academyhealth.org)
  • Seema Verma, now in line to head the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, arrives at Trump Tower in New York City on Nov. 22. (kpbs.org)
  • He picked Rep. Tom Price to head the Department of Health and Human Services and tapped Seema Verma, a health care consultant, to head the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. (kpbs.org)
  • Medicaid expansion could increase access to behavioral health services, but recovery centers may not survive without state funding. (bestnotes.com)
  • State and local health care spending rose by just 1.8 percent to $515 billion, according to the latest data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), a unit of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. (governing.com)
  • 11. The Affordable Care Act improved health insurance coverage and cardiovascular-related screening rates for cancer survivors seen in community health centers. (nih.gov)
  • The researchers also compared the health outcomes by patient race and ethnicity, finding that Medicaid expansion was associated with more Black patients being released to rehabilitation centers and fewer Black patients dying in the hospital. (nih.gov)
  • and whether rural enrollees are likely to have adequate access to primary care. (nih.gov)
  • Court rulings to date have rested on the original Medicaid statute's language about whether the primary objective of Medicaid is to provide coverage for low-income individuals or, as CMS and others in favor of work requirements have argued , is to improve the health of Medicaid enrollees. (academyhealth.org)
  • For the latter purpose, the belief is that requiring Medicaid enrollees to participate in work, school, job training, job searching, or volunteering activities will improve their health and employment outcomes. (academyhealth.org)
  • As part of the Section 1115 waiver evaluation of Michigan's Medicaid expansion - known as the Healthy Michigan Plan - we longitudinally surveyed enrollees about their employment and student status at two time points in 2016 and 2017 to assess for changes after the program was implemented in April 2014. (academyhealth.org)
  • Louisiana's expansion of Medicaid in 2016 was associated with a 33 percent reduction in uncompensated care costs as a share of total operating expenses among hospitals, the authors of the Health Affairs study estimate. (cbpp.org)
  • Using geo-coded data from 2010 to 2016, we estimate difference-in-differences models, comparing changes in outcomes before and after the Medicaid expansion in treatment and control states among a sample of over 3,000 unique adults aged 50 to 64 with income below 100% of the federal poverty level. (nih.gov)
  • One consequences of this construction is that, while Medicaid enrollment has increased 20% in the years 2013-2016, there is no data to show a comparable increase in medical facilities or practices that welcome Medicaid patients. (thedailybeast.com)
  • That's the part of HHS that oversees Medicare, Medicaid, and the Children's Health Insurance Program and has a budget of just under a trillion dollars in 2016. (kpbs.org)
  • Yet while recent attention has focused on the rise in health care price growth, I argue that what was unusual was the very low levels seen from 2014 to 2016. (chicagofed.org)
  • The patterns of these long- and short-term shocks combine to explain the very low levels of health care service price growth seen from 2014 to 2016 and suggest that the recent increase likely reflects a return to more-normal levels rather than a return to the high levels of the early 2000s. (chicagofed.org)
  • Estimates vary as to how many Oklahomans would qualify under Medicaid expansion, but a 2016 study commissioned by the Oklahoma Hospital Association projected about 272,000 Oklahomans would qualify in the first year. (modernhealthcare.com)
  • As of January 2016, 31 states and the District of Columbia had expanded their Medicaid programs. (governing.com)
  • Second, the federal rules for Medicaid don't require states to provide dental benefits for adults. (medscape.com)
  • As more adults sign up for Medicaid, some may sign their children up for the first time. (medscape.com)
  • With these services in flux and varying from state to state, it's hard to project how many adults would gain dental benefits from the expansion of the Medicaid program. (medscape.com)
  • We focus on older adults for whom health insurance has greater potential to improve health and well-being because of their greater health care needs relative to younger adults. (nih.gov)
  • We further focus on low-income adults who were the target of the Medicaid expansion. (nih.gov)
  • Our results thus suggest that the Medicaid expansion led to improved physical health for low-income, older adults. (nih.gov)
  • The 2010 ACA offered a Medicaid expansion population that described adults who are not disabled, not elderly, not parents, and who are 100-138% of the poverty line. (thedailybeast.com)
  • Voters in three traditionally Republican states supported ballot measures to extend Medicaid benefits to more low-income adults. (kbia.org)
  • The ACA improved Medicare by lowering prescription drug costs and improving preventive care, but we must do more to bolster the program for older adults and people with disabilities, including expanding benefits, further lowering and capping medication costs, and improving access to supports for people with lower incomes. (medicarerights.org)
  • A reversal of Medicaid expansion would disproportionately impact low-income earners, young adults, part-time workers, and people of color, according to the study, which was conducted by the University of California Berkeley Center for Labor Research and Education and the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research. (healthleadersmedia.com)
  • In a letter from its Board of Directors, Oklahoma Policy Institute has urged Governor Fallin and legislative leaders to reconsider the Governor's decision not to participate in the expansion of Medicaid for uninsured low-income adults. (okpolicy.org)
  • Jeff Alderman, MD is an associate professor at OU-Tulsa, and a regular contributor to OK Policy's blog Governor Mary Fallin recently decided to forego Medicaid expansion for low-income adults in Oklahoma under the Affordable Care Act. (okpolicy.org)
  • A working paper released this month from the National Bureau of Economic Research concludes that public insurance programs reduce incentives to work for low-income childless adults-precisely the population Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act targets. (alec.org)
  • P]olicymakers should be prepared for a reduction in labor supply among childless adults affected by the Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act. (alec.org)
  • For example, if 21.3 million additional adults gain Medicaid coverage following the ACA expansions, then approximately between 511,000 and 2.2 million fewer individuals will be employed as a result of the labor supply response. (alec.org)
  • President Barack Obama celebrated a victory when he announced that 7.1 million people had signed up for Obamacare through the federal and state exchanges, 3 million young adults had been assured of coverage by staying on their family's plan, and millions more gained insurance protection through the expansion of Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program. (truthdig.com)
  • Able-bodied adults without children do not qualify for Medicaid in Oklahoma, regardless of income. (modernhealthcare.com)
  • 4. Surveillance for Health Care Access and Health Services Use, Adults Aged 18-64 Years - Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, United States, 2014. (nih.gov)
  • 5. Association of State Medicaid Expansion Status With Rates of Suicide Among US Adults. (nih.gov)
  • 6. Has the Affordable Care Act Been Associated with Increased Insurance Coverage and Early-stage Diagnoses of Bone and Soft-tissue Sarcomas in Adults? (nih.gov)
  • 13. Medicaid Expansion and Incidence of Kidney Failure among Nonelderly Adults. (nih.gov)
  • The ACA, and in particular the Medicaid expansion component that 31 states and DC opted to take, is the reason why a record number of children and adults have affordable health care. (clasp.org)
  • Repealing the ACA and restructuring or cutting Medicaid financing would have serious implications for the wellbeing of low-income people, particularly young adults, women, and their children. (clasp.org)
  • Call your members of Congress to let them know how critical Medicaid is for moms and babies, and for the lifetime health of our children and young adults. (clasp.org)
  • But survey responses from a separate group of about 3,500 adults indicated that disparities did not diminish in states that expanded Medicaid coverage yet offered more limited dental benefits. (nih.gov)
  • A new study supported by NIMHD has found that the Medicaid expansion increased the number of young adults covered by health insurance. (nih.gov)
  • Young adults experiencing poverty, who do not have health insurance, or who belong to a racial or ethnic minority group are less likely to receive rehabilitation care after hospitalization due to a traumatic injury. (nih.gov)
  • Enrollment has far outpaced estimates in states where Medicaid was expanded," says Jessica Shelburn, Americans For Prosperity's Nebraska director. (hawaiipublicradio.org)
  • Included in that expansion is the ability to cap enrollment, as well as a request to the federal government to grant Utah a waiver to split the cost 90/10. (utahpolicy.com)
  • In Florida, Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) open enrollment is over, but you may still qualify for 2023 coverage. (legalconsumer.com)
  • In Florida, open enrollment for 2023 Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) coverage has ended. (legalconsumer.com)
  • This means that, unless you qualify for an exception or your income is low enough for Medicaid , you won't be able to get health insurance through Healthcare.gov until open enrollment for 2024 begins next fall. (legalconsumer.com)
  • Enrollment in SNAP and the Affordable Care Act declined among Hispanic citizens of the United States after the Secure Communities program took effect. (journalistsresource.org)
  • Overall, Medicaid enrollment grew by approximately 21 million since the ACA passed, dwarfing growth in the individual market, Gottlieb said. (medpagetoday.com)
  • Therefore, the ACA Medicaid expansion enhanced the health of underserved patients and repeal would jeopardize these advances for CHCs and their patients . (bvsalud.org)
  • This election proves that politicians who fought to repeal the Affordable Care Act got it wrong. (kbia.org)
  • Congress is currently debating whether and how to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act (ACA). (manatt.com)
  • In a new report for the Montana Healthcare Foundation, Manatt Health analyzes the potential impact on the State of Montana of a possible repeal of one key portion of the ACA-the Medicaid expansion and the enhanced federal match to cover that expanded care. (manatt.com)
  • All are at risk of losing that coverage should Congress decide to repeal the ACA's Medicaid expansion. (manatt.com)
  • Salo cited Ohio, where outgoing Republican Gov. John Kasich's enthusiasm for Medicaid expansion contrasted with Republican Sen. Rob Portman's (R-Ohio) vote to repeal and replace the ACA. (medpagetoday.com)
  • Maternal depression screening and treatment are among the many critical health care services that would be severely compromised by the ACA repeal efforts now back on the table in the U.S. House of Representatives. (clasp.org)
  • This week, Republican House Leaders continued their efforts to repeal the ACA, to make structural changes to Medicaid, and to make deep cuts to federal Medicaid spending. (clasp.org)
  • Blahous described the original thinking of the actuaries who analyzed the ACA's Medicaid expansion: "We think it will cost less per person to cover these folks then the people who are on the rolls already. (thedailybeast.com)
  • But the question now becomes, 'What will be her marching orders as they relate to Medicare and Medicaid? (kpbs.org)
  • Health care services included in the PCE deflator are services purchased out of pocket by consumers, as well as those services paid for by third parties on behalf of consumers-e.g., services paid for by employers through employer-provided health insurance or by governments through Medicare and Medicaid. (chicagofed.org)
  • In Medicare and Medicaid, which make up about 20% each of total U.S. health care spending, the prices paid by insurers are set either at the state (Medicaid) or federal (Medicare) level. (chicagofed.org)
  • We utilize the state-level variation in accessing Medicaid benefits and employ a difference-in-differences methodology that compares in-migration and out-migration rates of non-citizens in states that adopted Medicaid expansion, both before and after the policy implementation, to the outcomes of non-citizens in states that did not adopt the expansion. (nih.gov)
  • We sought to understand how much expanded Medicaid coverage itself may influence these outcomes. (academyhealth.org)
  • Our findings suggest that expanded Medicaid coverage achieves desired health and employment outcomes without work requirements. (academyhealth.org)
  • Two studies demonstrate a link between Medicaid expansion and positive health outcomes, adding evidence to inform an ongoing policy debate. (journalistsresource.org)
  • 15. Association of State Medicaid Expansion With Quality of Care and Outcomes for Low-Income Patients Hospitalized With Acute Myocardial Infarction. (nih.gov)
  • He and his team are continuing to study the effects of public dental insurance expansions on other oral health-related outcomes. (nih.gov)
  • The Medicaid expansion also improved outcomes for young adult Black and Hispanic trauma patients, reducing death rates and bringing their injury-related outcomes more in line with those of their White counterparts. (nih.gov)
  • IMPROVE aims to understand the biological, behavioral, environmental, sociocultural, clinical, and structural factors that affect pregnancy-related and pregnancy-associated severe morbidity and mortality and build an evidence base for improved care and outcomes. (nih.gov)
  • Those cuts in costs would mirror other states' experiences after expanding Medicaid and would reverse the relatively flat trends in hospitals' uncompensated care costs nationwide. (cbpp.org)
  • Expanding Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) is both contentious and complicated. (rand.org)
  • Unfortunately, not all states are expanding Medicaid. (webmd.com)
  • This week, Kansas is one step closer to expanding Medicaid in the state, after lawmakers passed a bill in the House that would add coverage for an estimated 150,000 Kansans. (canceradvocacy.org)
  • I think there is a general perception," Blahous answered, "because Medicaid is a program for poor, vulnerable people, there tends to be an equation between expanding Medicaid and doing more for people in need. (thedailybeast.com)
  • GRAPHIC: Health policy and budget analysts say the state will pay more to get less by not expanding Medicaid. (publicnewsservice.org)
  • Utah has come close to expanding Medicaid several times in recent years. (kbia.org)
  • Friday's Morning Edition on NPR did its best to try to promote the liberal cause of expanding Medicaid in Texas. (newsbusters.org)
  • You can fill out one application to see if you qualify for Medicaid or for a tax credit to buy insurance on the Marketplace. (webmd.com)
  • The large majority of uninsured individuals have incomes in the range that would qualify for the ACA Medicaid expansion or premium tax credits for exchange coverage. (kff.org)
  • A change that could help those with limited income would be to provide tax credits for those with incomes less than 100% of federal poverty who live in states that didn't expand Medicaid and who don't qualify for tax credits now. (homedialysis.org)
  • Here I found out that my children qualify for Medicaid and my insurance will cost me $46 a month. (truthdig.com)
  • Children in Oklahoma can qualify for Medicaid if the annual household income is about $35,500 per year for a family of two. (modernhealthcare.com)
  • Despite its frivolity, this threat to the ACA would have had massive implications for the American health care system. (medicarerights.org)
  • She did so earlier this morning, calling the decision a surprise ("Almost every prognostication was wrong") and commenting on the implications of the Medicaid ruling: "I would imagine that it will be the rare state that doesn't accept the Medicaid expansion - but they don't have to. (stanford.edu)
  • Republicans in the Legislature have blocked expansion, arguing that the Affordable Care Act (ACA) or Obamacare is unworkable. (publicnewsservice.org)
  • And it makes the case that rather than increasing economic opportunity, Obamacare-and its Medicaid expansion more specifically-actually may kill it. (alec.org)
  • The expansion, known as the Healthy Indiana Plan 2.0, went into effect early last year, and Verma's involvement in it may prove important as Congress and the Trump administration, including the Vice-president elect, make decisions on the future of Obamacare. (kpbs.org)
  • This article explains the costs of health care plans offered under the Affordable Care Act (commonly called Obamacare) for individuals or families who are currently uninsured or not covered by a job-based health plan. (legalconsumer.com)
  • Technically, the Affordable Care Act -- aka Obamacare -- still says that you must have health insurance. (legalconsumer.com)
  • The Affordable Care Act (ACA), also known as Obamacare, provides for expanded Medicaid coverage for low-income Americans. (bestnotes.com)
  • The recent trend of slight overall upticks in uncompensated care costs could turn into one of rapid declines if the remaining non-expansion states expand Medicaid, a recent Health Affairs study indicates. (cbpp.org)
  • Considering the similarities in the remaining non-expansion states to Louisiana before its expansion, they too could expect marked improvements in their uninsured rates and uncompensated care costs if they expand Medicaid. (cbpp.org)
  • I learned that lawmakers and the Obama Administration created this formula - what is called an "inflated match rate" - in order to encourage more states to expand their Medicaid populations regardless of the illogic. (thedailybeast.com)
  • The Obama Administration gave the states a choice: expand Medicaid or risk losing their entire Medicaid budget. (reason.com)
  • Chief Justice Roberts recognized that the states did not actually have a meaningful choice of whether to expand Medicaid. (reason.com)
  • RICHMOND, Va. - By choosing not to expand Medicaid, health policy and budget analysts say the General Assembly has put the state in the position of paying more to get less. (publicnewsservice.org)
  • Karen Cameron, director of Virginia Consumer Voices for Healthcare, says this is a good thing, but she points out that the state could cover 10 times as many by accepting federal funds to expand Medicaid. (publicnewsservice.org)
  • Democrat Janet Mills, Maine's governor-elect, has pledged to expand Medicaid on her first day in office . (kbia.org)
  • One of the biggest decisions will be whether to expand Medicaid coverage to roughly 900,000 Floridians who are just above the poverty line. (tampabay.com)
  • He has introduced two failed proposals to expand Medicaid in the Legislature. (hawaiipublicradio.org)
  • Last year, Maine residents bypassed the Legislature and voted to expand Medicaid, although that expansion has been held up by a funding dispute with Gov. Paul LePage. (hawaiipublicradio.org)
  • Instead, the state will expand Medicaid coverage to all Utahns earning up to 100% of federal poverty, which will cover about 90,000 Utahns. (utahpolicy.com)
  • Under the Affordable Care Act, the 90/10 split is only available to states that fully expand Medicaid. (utahpolicy.com)
  • If Utah can't get the requested waivers, the fall-back plan implemented by the House is to fully expand Medicaid to 138% of poverty in 2020, which is what Prop. 3 mandated. (utahpolicy.com)
  • Lets states choose to expand Medicaid to those under 65 without Medicare who have incomes up to 138% of the federal poverty level (31 states did so). (homedialysis.org)
  • Provides tax credits to those whose income is 100-400% of the federal poverty level no matter which "metal level" plan (bronze, silver, gold or platinum) they choose in states that didn't expand Medicaid (income limits for tax credits are 138% to 400% of federal poverty in states that did expand Medicaid) . (homedialysis.org)
  • Since its closure, the liberal media rallied behind the town's mayor Adam O'Neal, who has repeatedly complained about his fellow Republicans refusing to expand Medicaid. (newsbusters.org)
  • ACA offers financial incentives for adopting the Medicaid expansion, but courts have ruled that the decision to expand Medicaid is still up to individual states. (bestnotes.com)
  • Behavioral health and addiction treatment providers may see greater demand in states that expand Medicaid or receive Section 1115 waivers. (bestnotes.com)
  • Oklahoma's highest court on Tuesday rejected a legal effort to block a plan for a public vote on whether to expand Medicaid to tens of thousands of poor residents. (modernhealthcare.com)
  • In some states, if a measure imposes "significant fiscal liabilities" it can't be considered, Pope added, so the ability to expand Medicaid without going through the legislature in those states is "quite limited. (medpagetoday.com)
  • While it's "reasonable" to expect that the new Democratic governor of Wisconsin may advance Medicaid expansion, in "hardcore red states" where the governor and legislature remain Republican "it's hard to see what leads those states to expand," Pope said. (medpagetoday.com)
  • Under that law, states were given the option to expand Medicaid coverage to people at a higher income level. (nih.gov)
  • The Affordable Care Act (ACA) is divided into 10 titles and contains provisions that became effective immediately, 90 days after enactment, and six months after enactment, as well as provisions phased in through to 2020. (wikipedia.org)
  • The estimated na- colorectal cancer screening could focus on population subgroups tional expenditure for cancer care in the US rose from $190.2 bil- and on new outreach methods directed at the unscreened in those lion in 2015 to $208.9 billion in 2020, a 10% increase mainly due subgroups. (cdc.gov)
  • If approved, Medicaid coverage for Idaho residents will start in 2020. (bestnotes.com)
  • First, another program, the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP), already picks up where Medicaid leaves off (in most cases up to 200% of the poverty line), [ 6 ] and it includes dental benefits for children. (medscape.com)
  • The county-by-county plan builds on a partial Medicaid expansion that California undertook in 2010. (mdcounties.org)
  • for example, in California, Medicaid is known as Medi-Cal and CHIP is known as Healthy Families. (medscape.com)
  • The California Values Act, which was on Gov. Jerry Brown's desk to be signed by Oct. 15, would limit state law enforcement resources from being used by federal immigration enforcement, Gonzales said. (socialworkers.org)
  • In California, people are really interested in single-payer health care. (socialworkers.org)
  • The Fairness Project is funded by the SEIU United Healthcare Workers West, a California health care workers union. (kbia.org)
  • Today, the U.S. Supreme Court once again upheld the Affordable Care Act (ACA) as the law of the land, determining that the plaintiffs in California v. Texas lacked standing to sue. (medicarerights.org)
  • Beginning on October 1, 2013, Americans who do not have affordable health benefits through a job will be able to go to a new health insurance marketplace in their state and enroll in a private health plan. (commonwealthfund.org)
  • Thursday's submission of the petition signatures drew immediate opposition from the local chapter of the Koch Network-backed Americans For Prosperity, which vowed to oppose the pro-expansion campaign. (hawaiipublicradio.org)
  • If you're interested -- or if the tax penalty comes back -- here's what the Affordable Care Act still says about the kinds of health insurance Americans should have. (legalconsumer.com)
  • However, just 12% of expenditures on health care for Americans are out of pocket ( Medical Expenditure Panel Survey , 2014). (chicagofed.org)
  • This law is an important step toward an improved health care system that gives all Americans access to the care they need when they need it. (stanford.edu)
  • He goes on to discuss the importance of fixing our country's physician shortage, saying that we must "ensure that Americans have access to care - not just an insurance card. (stanford.edu)
  • The Affordable Care Act, including its individual mandate that virtually all Americans buy health insurance, is constitutional. (stanford.edu)
  • Health care spending by state and local governments changed by the second smallest rate on record in 2014, a year in which millions of Americans gained health insurance through the Affordable Care Act's expansion of state Medicaid programs. (governing.com)
  • In 2010, Congress passed the Affordable Care Act (ACA), which included extending health insurance to more Americans. (nih.gov)
  • Status of Medicaid expansion decisions, as of 2018. (nih.gov)
  • Uncompensated care costs as a share of hospital operating expenses rose in 2018 by 0.1 percentage points according to a recent report from the Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission. (cbpp.org)
  • The modest changes in uncompensated care costs in 2017 and 2018 coincided with modest increases in uninsured rates during those years, and stand in contrast to the sharp decreases in uncompensated care costs from 2013 to 2015, immediately after ACA coverage provisions took effect. (cbpp.org)
  • Health care services inflation was consistently at or above 3% per year in the early 2000s, declined from around 3% at the end of the 2000s to under 1% in 2015, and then rebounded to just under 2% in early 2018. (chicagofed.org)
  • Cancer Care 's application for continuing education credits for this program was supported by the Diana Napoli Fund. (cancercare.org)
  • Virginia's Medicaid Innovation and Reform Commission , tasked with assessing reforms of the Medicaid program and considering a path to expansion, isn't close to coming up with a plan . (sayanythingblog.com)
  • Today, Merck challenged the constitutionality of the Drug Price Negotiation Program for Medicare, under the Inflation Reduction Act. (reason.com)
  • Another key decision related to the Affordable Care Act will be whether the state revamps its own health insurance program to start spending money to cover part-time employees. (tampabay.com)
  • Two years after Gov. Janet Mills issued E xecutive O rder 1 , implementing the voter-approved expansion of health care through Medicaid , the program is proving invaluable as Mainers continue to experience the public health crisis of COVID-19 and the economic downturn caused by the pandemic. (mecep.org)
  • Given the pandemic's widespread layoffs and job losses, which often result in a loss of health care, many Mainers would likely have gone uninsured or faced unaffordable insurance premiums if not for the expanded Medicaid program. (mecep.org)
  • T he expanded MaineCare program is providing health care to Mainers during an unprecedented public health emergency - all at a very modest cost to Maine taxpayers. (mecep.org)
  • But I think if you look at the totality of the Trump administration's picks today - Congressman Price as well as Ms. Verma - this represents potentially a very damaging and chaotic restructuring of the Medicaid program. (kpbs.org)
  • To help journalists report on Medicaid, we've summarized a few studies that can inform reporters about key debates happening about this program. (journalistsresource.org)
  • About 786,000 Oklahomans, or 20% of the population, currently are enrolled in Medicaid, and more than two-thirds of those enrolled in the program are children. (modernhealthcare.com)
  • Beginning Jan. 1, 2014, the jointly funded federal-state health care program for low-income children, parents, people with disabilities, and the elderly became available to all individuals who earn up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level ($16,105 for a single adult in 2014). (governing.com)
  • In general, Tuesday's voting indicated that people believe "the Medicaid program is one that brings value. (medpagetoday.com)
  • Efforts to backpedal the Medicaid expansion and underfund the program endanger the lives of our nation's children and families. (clasp.org)
  • Medicaid is the federal government's health insurance program for people experiencing poverty. (nih.gov)
  • As the United States' largest public health insurance program, Medicaid has since 1965 played a crucial role in the struggle for equitable health care access. (nih.gov)
  • Under Brown's plan, outlined in his FY 2013-2014 budget, counties - rather than the state - would be the entities responsible for the fiscal and operational aspects of the expansion. (mdcounties.org)
  • While many prior studies have demonstrated how Medicaid expansion reduced hospitals' uncompensated care costs across all states, the recent Health Affairs study focuses on the experience of Louisiana, an expansion state that shares key similarities with many of the remaining 12 non-expansion states. (cbpp.org)
  • This study addresses these knowledge gaps using the 2007-2011 panels of the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS), linked with state-level Medicaid policy data and county-level primary care provider data. (nih.gov)
  • Of course, Merck is not a state, and the Inflation Reduction Act does not violate the Tenth Amendment. (reason.com)
  • They say expansion actually would save taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars by reducing pressure on other state health care programs. (publicnewsservice.org)
  • Jill Hanken, an attorney with the Virginia Poverty Law Center, says even after paying the state share, expansion would actually save taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars a year by reducing pressure on other state health care programs. (publicnewsservice.org)
  • The report contemplates the ramifications of repealing Medicaid expansion on access to coverage and care, the state budget and the broader economy. (manatt.com)
  • Scott and legislative leaders will decide over the next few months whether the state implements key portions of the Affordable Care Act. (tampabay.com)
  • Voters in Nebraska may get to decide whether their state expands Medicaid this November. (hawaiipublicradio.org)
  • Supporters of Nebraska's Medicaid expansion campaign, Insure the Good Life, turned in petitions bearing more than 133,000 signatures to the secretary of state Thursday. (hawaiipublicradio.org)
  • Of the states that have done detailed estimates of what effect does Medicaid expansion have on the budget generally it's been found to be a net gain for the state," he says. (hawaiipublicradio.org)
  • Though he is in the midst of a re-election campaign and his Democratic opponent, state Sen. Bob Krist, supports Medicaid expansion, Ricketts says he will not participate in a campaign against Medicaid expansion. (hawaiipublicradio.org)
  • If a state does not implement the expansion, most of these individuals will be left without an affordable coverage option and will likely remain uninsured. (kff.org)
  • Given their higher uninsured rates, people of color will be disproportionately impacted if a state does not implement the Medicaid expansion. (kff.org)
  • In her 2013 State of the State address, Governor Mary Fallin reiterated her opposition to accepting federal dollars to provide coverage to uninsured Oklahomans through Medicaid, as provided under the Affordable Care Act. (okpolicy.org)
  • Medicaid expansion is a central pillar of the Affordable Care Act, bu t each state had to approve expansion independently. (mecep.org)
  • Susan Jo Thomas, who heads the Indiana insurance advocacy group Covering Kids and Families , says Verma's contributions to HIP 2.0 made Medicaid expansion possible in a Republican state. (kpbs.org)
  • She understood that in order to get expansion in this state, it's more about what is palatable, what can get approved," she says. (kpbs.org)
  • She was also paid by Hewlett-Packard, a Medicaid vendor that received more than $500 million in state contracts. (kpbs.org)
  • On July 1, a local hospital in Belhaven, North Carolina closed its doors in part because the state legislature opposed the expansion of Medicaid. (newsbusters.org)
  • Proponents argue that expanding coverage would increase care opportunities for state residents, add healthcare jobs, and support rural hospitals. (bestnotes.com)
  • A bill introduced in the state House would provide an alternative to Medicaid expansion. (bestnotes.com)
  • In health care, where many prices are determined administratively by Medicare and state-level Medicaid programs, a series of large policy changes over the past decade have affected health care service prices. (chicagofed.org)
  • The state and local deceleration, second only to a 1.4 percent drop in 2009, occurred across spending categories, but was principally driven by especially slow growth in the two largest: state Medicaid payments (0.9 percent) and public employee health insurance premiums (3.7 percent). (governing.com)
  • One element that slowed the growth of state Medicaid expenditures was modest but steady economic recovery. (governing.com)
  • As a result, state Medicaid spending ticked up by just 0.9 percent, only the fourth time it has grown by less than 1 percent since 1987, the earliest year for which data are available. (governing.com)
  • In contrast to the unusually low spending growth at the state level, federal Medicaid expenditures rose by 18.4 percent, up from 6.1 percent in 2013. (governing.com)
  • State and local government health care expenditures as a share of revenue totaled 30 percent in 2014, up from 16 percent in 1987, according to Pew's analysis of data from CMS and the Bureau of Economic Analysis. (governing.com)
  • 14. Association of State Medicaid Expansion With Rate of Uninsured Hospitalizations for Major Cardiovascular Events, 2009-2014. (nih.gov)
  • These findings suggest that the channel between Medicaid expansion and evictions is sensitive to state environments as well as county specific population demographics and uninsurance levels. (nih.gov)
  • Maine voters approved an expansion in 2017 , but Gov. Paul LePage, a Republican, has resisted implementing the law, even vetoing a $60 million funding bill that passed the Legislature. (kbia.org)
  • Still, he's a bit wary that members of the Utah Legislature will try to do something to derail the results before the expansion of Medicaid can be implemented next spring. (kbia.org)
  • Democrats continued to criticize the move to scale back the expansion, pointing out that voters wanted full expansion, not the watered down version Republicans in the legislature were pushing ahead with. (utahpolicy.com)
  • Maine voters approved expansion in 2017 , after former Gov. Paul LePage spent years vetoing Medicaid expansion bills enacted by the Legislature. (mecep.org)
  • The researchers also learned that there were fewer differences in access to care in expansion states during the first year of the ACA. (cancer.org)
  • The researchers also found that the Medicaid expansion resulted in a 21% increase in young adult trauma patients covered by Medicaid. (nih.gov)
  • Health reform called for more people to be able to get Medicaid. (webmd.com)
  • The expansion population - the sickest people went on the rolls first. (thedailybeast.com)
  • While a lot of people don't see the administration's talk about overhauling the tax system as a social work issue, Gonzales said, "if it takes a lot of money out of the system, if it slashes Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security, it's really going to affect communities - and especially those in poverty. (socialworkers.org)
  • With the approval of the measures in Idaho, Utah and Nebraska, about 300,000 low-income people will gain access to health care coverage, according to estimates from government agencies and advocacy groups in those states. (kbia.org)
  • People are enthusiastic about Medicaid expansion because they recognize that it's both good for health care but it's also a compassionate thing to do," says Jonathan Schleifer, executive director of The Fairness Project , which worked to get the questions on the ballots of the four states. (kbia.org)
  • Before the Affordable Care Act, Medicaid, the government health insurance for the poor and disabled, was reserved mainly for pregnant women, children, low-income seniors and people with disabilities. (kbia.org)
  • In Montana and the 30 other states that expanded Medicaid, more than 11 million people have gained coverage since 2014. (manatt.com)
  • Supporters say expansion could bring health insurance to around 90,000 low-income Nebraskans - single people making up to 138 percent of the federal poverty line, or $16,753 a year, or $34,638 for a four-person household. (hawaiipublicradio.org)
  • Given that people of color are at disproportionate risk of being uninsured and having low incomes, the ACA coverage expansions could particularly benefit communities of color and advance efforts to eliminate disparities. (kff.org)
  • This brief provides an overview of health coverage by race and ethnicity today to provide greater insight into the potential impacts of the ACA coverage expansions for people of color. (kff.org)
  • The ACA coverage expansions have the potential to significantly increase coverage for people of color and reduce disparities in coverage. (kff.org)
  • Without the Medicaid expansion, many people of color will remain uninsured contributing to ongoing access problems and continuing disparities in coverage. (kff.org)
  • Indeed, the ability to get access to care and medical attention for health conditions is necessary for people to maintain health and functioning, including the ability to get a job or attend school. (academyhealth.org)
  • This research provides strong evidence for the contention that enrolling in Medicaid traps people in poverty and makes it harder for them to make their way into the middle class. (alec.org)
  • That means people end up not getting the health care they need. (kpbs.org)
  • Price has advocated severely cutting Medicaid funding, and Alker worries that cuts and more stringent requirements under Verma would mean people will lose the health insurance. (kpbs.org)
  • On average, people with disabilities have a lot more encounters with the health care system - they need more health care," says researcher H. Stephen Kaye. (journalistsresource.org)
  • In addition, an undetermined number of people have signed up privately, outside the exchanges, for policies that comply with the Affordable Care Act. (truthdig.com)
  • Ari Gottlieb, a principal for the A2 Strategy Group, called the expansion of Medicaid in the three Republican-led states "a broad recognition, amongst the electorate, that covering more people is a good thing. (medpagetoday.com)
  • When the act was being drafted, the dental insurance industry lobbied for a clause allowing dental insurance plans to be sold separately from medical plans within the exchanges. (medscape.com)
  • The Affordable Care Act (ACA) dramatically expanded health insurance, but questions remain regarding its effects on health. (nih.gov)
  • We find that the Medicaid expansion was associated with a 15 percentage point increase in Medicaid coverage which was largely offset by declines in other types of insurance. (nih.gov)
  • If you're having trouble finding health insurance you can afford, you'll find more options now because of the Affordable Care Act. (webmd.com)
  • Insurance expansion buoyed CHCs' financial viability by increasing reimbursement. (bvsalud.org)
  • In just about five months, the major health insurance provisions of the Affordable Care Act will go into effect. (commonwealthfund.org)
  • Which CA Residents Lose Insurance if Medicaid Expansion is Reversed? (healthleadersmedia.com)
  • One of the key goals of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) is to reduce the number of uninsured through a Medicaid expansion and the creation of health insurance exchange marketplaces with advance premium tax credits to help moderate-income individuals pay for this coverage. (kff.org)
  • But the following year in 1945, to allay fears of federal regulation in insurance, Congress passed the McCarran-Ferguson Act to reaffirm that regulation of the insurance business was for states - not Congress - to do. (healthcarelawsuits.org)
  • Medicaid is an important source of insurance coverage for low-income individuals in the United States, many of whom are employed or students. (academyhealth.org)
  • This is where you can learn about the various health insurance options available to you under the Affordable Care Act. (legalconsumer.com)
  • When an individual with insurance visits a health care provider, the "price" is what is paid by the insurer (Medicare, Medicaid, or a private insurer) to the provider. (chicagofed.org)
  • Patients seeking mental health care deal with hurdles such as incorrect phone numbers, month-long delays in scheduling appointments and psychiatrists who refuse to accept insurance. (journalistsresource.org)
  • Starting in 2014, the Affordable Care Act (ACA) will require private insurance plans sold in the individual and small-group markets to cover a roster of "essential health benefits. (nih.gov)
  • 19. Association of Medicaid Expansion Under the Affordable Care Act With Insurance Status, Cancer Stage, and Timely Treatment Among Patients With Breast, Colon, and Lung Cancer. (nih.gov)
  • The Affordable Care Act (ACA), including its expansion of Medicaid coverage, significantly increased health insurance coverage and access to health and mental health services. (clasp.org)
  • Despite lessened disparities, overall use of dental care remained low across racial and ethnic groups, indicating that insurance coverage is one of multiple factors that could improve access to care. (nih.gov)
  • Insurance coverage is only one factor that affects access to care," Wehby says. (nih.gov)
  • Using data from both on- and off-exchange Affordable Care Act (ACA)-compliant small-group and individual insurance markets in the United States for the period 2015-19, we analyzed the contributions of trends in utilization, unit price, and service mix to growth in overall health care spending. (nih.gov)
  • To assess the prevalence of pre-existing conditions for community health center (CHC) patients who gained insurance coverage post-Affordable Care Act (ACA). (cdc.gov)
  • Thus, it is likely that the prevalence is different for those insured by Medicaid, the individual marketplace, or those without insurance. (cdc.gov)
  • The results highlight the divide between voters, even in conservative states, who generally support providing health benefits to the poor, and conservative politicians who have rejected the expansion, which is a central part of the Affordable Care Act. (kbia.org)
  • Instead of full Medicaid expansion to low-income Utahns earning up to 138% of the federal poverty level, which is what voters approved this year, SB96 expands healthcare coverage to about 60,000 fewer Utahns. (utahpolicy.com)
  • Why do the voters want full expansion? (utahpolicy.com)
  • The Democratic governors in Maine, Kansas and Wisconsin all support Medicaid expansion and voters in Idaho, Nebraska and Utah passed initiatives in favor of Medicaid expansion. (taxpolicycenter.org)
  • Yet I'm not sure that voters in those states, when they voted to approve Medicaid expansion, necessarily tie Medicaid to the ACA," he said. (medpagetoday.com)
  • It invalidated part of the Violence Against Women Act, saying the provision in question was non-economic in nature and therefore outside of Congress' commerce regulation power. (healthcarelawsuits.org)
  • Why did the Supreme Court in NFIB v. Sebelius uphold the individual mandate but strike down the Medicaid expansion provision of the Affordable Care Act? (nih.gov)
  • In order for the Affordable Care Act (ACA) Medicaid expansion to effectively meet the needs of rural populations, implementation will need to be based on the underlying differences in rural and urban populations and on the unique needs of rural residents and health systems. (nih.gov)
  • The new CMS spending data show that the federal government shielded states from the costs of the ACA Medicaid expansion during the first year of implementation. (governing.com)
  • What impact will the decision have on the implementation of the Act? (nih.gov)
  • They compared data from two time periods: the three years before the ACA Medicaid expansion, 2011 to 2013, and the four years after it, from 2014 to 2017. (nih.gov)
  • They also compared data from five states where Medicaid expansion occurred in January 2014 to data from five states that had not yet implemented the expansion by the end of 2017. (nih.gov)
  • Republicans in Congress have become ensnared in a politically tough battle over what to do with Medicaid, but they may want to look at this one detail. (thedailybeast.com)
  • The Republicans in Congress now debating the fate of the 2010 Affordable Care think that just about everything is wrong with it. (thedailybeast.com)
  • We also urge Congress and the Biden administration to build upon the successes of the ACA, working together to ensure greater affordability and access to care and coverage for everyone in the United States. (medicarerights.org)
  • The lesson: "You can't really depend on the federal government or the Congress to have the Medicaid program's back," Salo said. (medpagetoday.com)
  • Address to Congress on Health Care. (nih.gov)
  • or Transcript online at https://millercenter.org/the-presidency/presidential-speeches/september-9-2009-address-congress-health-care . (nih.gov)
  • Congress has passed the National Alzheimer's Project Act (Public Law 111-375), which establishes a committee that reports to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and to Congress on a national plan to address the escalating burden of Alzheimer's disease (AD). (nih.gov)
  • There are many factors that are important for increasing access, enabling adequate use of services, and meeting dental care needs, particularly among low-income populations. (nih.gov)
  • Given how common these conditions are, repealing pre-existing condition protections could be extremely harmful to millions of patients and would likely exacerbate health care and health disparities. (cdc.gov)
  • It is likely to be mid-August before the results are made official, but supporters are confident they have enough for Medicaid expansion to be on the ballot. (hawaiipublicradio.org)
  • ATTEMPT TO BLOCK ARKANSAS MEDICAID EXPANSION FAILS - Tea party activists failed to collect the necessary 46,880 signatures to place a measure blocking the Arkansas Medicaid expansion plan on the 2014 ballot. (politico.com)
  • In Montana, Gottlieb said the ballot measure to continue expansion was "broadly popular" in polls, until the tobacco industry poured money into a campaign against it. (medpagetoday.com)
  • Matt Salo, executive director for the National Association of Medicaid Directors, agreed that the failure of Montana's ballot measure was "100% [due to] pushback from the tobacco industry. (medpagetoday.com)
  • One reason ballot initiatives made the process of expansion easier is because it's less of a "Democrat versus Republican" issue, said Chris Pope, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute. (medpagetoday.com)
  • In many Southern states where Medicaid has not been expanded -- Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Oklahoma, Texas -- citizen-initiated ballot propositions aren't an option. (medpagetoday.com)
  • But Virginians still can expect lots of heat from both pro- and anti-expansion lawmakers on this one. (sayanythingblog.com)
  • As the Media Research Center reported earlier this week, the Big Three Networks (ABC, CBS, and NBC) continued to spread the fake news that Senate Republicans were cutting Medicaid despite the Congressional Budget Office's report the proved otherwise. (newsbusters.org)
  • In March, due to a lack of support, House Republicans were forced to suspend a vote on the American Health Care Act, which, if passed, would have been a major step in undoing the historic health care gains of the ACA . (clasp.org)
  • Instead, Blahous explained, "But because of the warped incentives of the Affordable Care Act, they have wound up costing a lot more. (thedailybeast.com)
  • Recent research from Louisiana underscores how Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) could dramatically reduce uncompensated care costs - the cost of providing health care that goes unpaid by patients or insurers - for states that have not yet expanded. (cbpp.org)
  • Here, we summarize our results to-date as experts in investigating the impact of ACA Medicaid expansion on CHCs and the patients they serve. (bvsalud.org)
  • These findings indicate that the ACA Medicaid expansion significantly helped CHCs and patients . (bvsalud.org)
  • 16. Association of Medicaid Expansion With 1-Year Mortality Among Patients With End-Stage Renal Disease. (nih.gov)
  • 18. Medicaid Expansion and Mortality Among Patients With Breast, Lung, and Colorectal Cancer. (nih.gov)
  • You can help patients surmount barriers to following through on a treatment referral by countering the effects of stigma, conveying that treatment can be effective, and offering a range of choices for care. (nih.gov)
  • Today's treatment options may be more acceptable to many patients, including FDA-approved medications for alcohol use disorder that can be offered in primary care, along with flexible, lower-intensity outpatient and telehealth options for specialty care. (nih.gov)
  • The NIAAA Alcohol Treatment Navigator can help healthcare professionals and patients to find specialty programs and individual providers that offer evidence-based care tailored to each individual's needs. (nih.gov)
  • Some patients may be able to receive treatment in primary care via brief interventions and FDA-approved AUD medications, whereas those with more severe AUD or with mental health comorbidities will likely need a referral to specialty behavioral and pharmacologic care. (nih.gov)
  • Increasing the number of patients discharged to rehabilitation facilities where they could continue to heal from their injuries under professional care. (nih.gov)
  • The demographics in the Medicaid expansion states and the non-expansion states were about the same, with Black patients comprising about 27% and Hispanic patients making up about 14% of the total number of patients. (nih.gov)
  • However, patients from non-expansion states were more likely to live in poorer neighborhoods, while patients from expansion states were more likely to live in higher-income communities. (nih.gov)
  • In fact, the disparities between Black patients and White patients and between patients from lower- and higher-income communities were reduced in Medicaid expansion states. (nih.gov)
  • ACS-funded research will help contribute to critical discussions about how we treat cancer patients, including addressing social and economic needs and advancing equitable care. (cancer.org)
  • Those provisions aren't allowed under traditional Medicaid, but Indiana got a federal waiver to implement them. (kpbs.org)
  • Medicaid Expansion Cuts Hospitals' Uncom. (cbpp.org)
  • That's unsurprising, as hospitals' uncompensated care costs are mostly composed of charity care and debt expenses for the uninsured. (cbpp.org)
  • As the major ACA coverage provisions took effect, charity care and bad debt among hospitals fell by $8.6 billion (23 percent) from 2013 to 2015. (cbpp.org)
  • The impact was particularly large for rural hospitals, for which expansion was associated with a 55 percent decrease. (cbpp.org)
  • The health care services component includes outpatient services (physician and dental services, home health care, and laboratory services), as well as services provided in hospitals and nursing homes. (chicagofed.org)
  • Craig Garthwaite, John Graves, Tal Gross, Zeynal Karaca, Victoria Marone, and Matthew J. Notowidigdo study the effect of the Affordable Care Act Medicaid expansion on hospital services, with a focus on the geographic variations of its impact, finding that it increased Medicaid visits, decreased uninsured visits, and lead the uninsured to consume more hospital services overall- primarily through outpatient visits to the ED for deferrable conditions. (brookings.edu)
  • In addition, 20 million individuals gained coverage following the ACA, with subsequent increases in outpatient health care visits and preventive service receipt. (cdc.gov)
  • We found the ACA Medicaid expansion increased access to care and preventive services, primarily in Medicaid expansion states. (bvsalud.org)
  • Medicaid serves those at or near the poverty line who are generally single mothers, children under six years old, children from six to 18 in needy familes, the disabled, or the elderly poor. (thedailybeast.com)
  • The ACA gives states the option of covering the working poor - up to one and a third times the poverty line - under Medicaid. (publicnewsservice.org)
  • We must not jeopardize the critical health care coverage that Medicaid provides. (clasp.org)
  • Over half of uninsured Hispanics and nearly two-thirds of uninsured Blacks and American Indians/Alaska Natives have incomes below the Medicaid expansion limit of 138% FPL. (kff.org)
  • Disparities in health care in the United States remain a longstanding challenge. (kff.org)
  • A team led by George Wehby, PhD, a professor in health management and policy at the University of Iowa College of Public Health, found that expanding public coverage of dental care was linked to narrowed racial and ethnic disparities in use of dental services. (nih.gov)
  • Racial disparities in receipt of guideline-concordant care for early-onset colorectal cancer in the U.S. (cancer.org)
  • Disparities in the use of screening breast magnetic resonance imaging persist in Louisiana after the Affordable Care Act: A question of access, policy, institutional support, or something else? (nih.gov)
  • Although overall age-adjusted cancer incidence has been stabiliz- standards of care. (cdc.gov)
  • McAuliffe is pushing for Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act - especially since his spending plan relies on dollars he believes will come with that increased reliance on the federal government . (sayanythingblog.com)
  • The federal government pays for 90 percent of the health care costs incurred by those who get Medicaid benefits through the expansion measures. (kbia.org)
  • House Speaker Will Weatherford, R-Wesley Chapel, echoed the governor and said he's not sure the federal government will keep its promise to pick up most of the share of Medicaid expansion. (tampabay.com)
  • Other Republican-led states, such as Iowa, Ohio and Kentucky, have contracted with Verma's firm to help submit their own Medicaid expansion proposals to the federal government that also include conservative provisions such as asking recipients to pay for some of their care, requiring them to work or to be actively looking for work. (kpbs.org)