Medicaid expansion
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Is Medicaid Expansion Still a Political Wedge Issue?
When Medicaid expansion was first enacted, it was a hot topic debate between Democrats and Republicans. But more and more states are starting to expand Medicaid, including several conservative states.
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Payer’s Place: Dawn Maroney
Dawn Maroney, President, Markets of Alignment Health and CEO of Alignment Health Plan, to discuss how they are using technology to provide better service and care to consumers.
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Missouri takes months to process Medicaid applications — longer than law allows
While 64,210 people have been approved as part of the expansion that took effect in the summer 2021, nearly 73,000 applications were pending as of early February. Until the expansion went into effect, for nearly a decade, Missouri’s Republican political leaders resisted expanding eligibility for Medicaid.
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Report: Uninsured rate holds steady at 11% during pandemic despite job losses
The increase in access to public health insurance coverage — via legislation like the Families First Coronavirus Response Act that prevents states from disenrolling Medicaid beneficiaries — helped offset the loss of employer-sponsored insurance, the report from Robert Wood Johnson Foundation shows.
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Study: Medical debt outstrips other types of personal debt, reaching $140B
Though medical debt climbed high over the past decade, it appears that Medicaid expansion can help. States that expanded Medicaid saw average debt drop by 44% as opposed to a 10% reduction in non-expansion states.
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Biden’s American Rescue Plan Act aims to bolster the ACA. Here’s how.
President Joe Biden recently signed the $1.9 trillion Covid-19 relief package into law. The American Rescue Plan Act includes several provisions to boost coverage under the ACA, like widening eligibility for premium tax credits.
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How Biden will restore the ACA: 4 potential changes
With the Democrats leading the Senate and House, and Joe Biden installed as president, the Affordable Care Act will be restored and strengthened over the next four years, an expert from the Kaiser Family Foundation predicts.
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Applying Remote Patient Monitoring to Surgery Prep and Recovery, Oncology and Women’s Health
Join us to learn about the latest trends in remote monitoring and how to extend its benefits beyond chronic conditions to more patients – all while using fewer staff resources.
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Red states’ case against ACA hinges on whether they were actually harmed by the law
The states are trying to prove they were harmed by the 2010 health law — and thus have “legal standing” to challenge its constitutionality.
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Appeals court strikes down Arkansas work requirements
A three-judge panel unanimously upheld a previous ruling that the Department of Health and Human Services failed to consider whether the work requirements would fulfill Medicaid’s core objective of providing health care to low-income families.
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Experts unsure if states will bet on block grants
CMS Administrator Seema Verma unveiled a new demonstration policy that would allow states to pay for Medicaid expansion using block grants. But experts were unsure how many states would opt into them, with possible financial and legal challenges ahead.
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Patient groups push back against Medicaid block grants
CMS released a new policy Thursday that would allow states to fund Medicaid expansion through block grants. Patient advocacy groups raised concerns that the policy could limit enrollment or reduce benefits in states that adopt it.
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Federal judge blocks Kentucky and Arkansas Medicaid work requirements
While the policy has not yet gone into effect in Kentucky, data from the Arkansas Department of Human Services found that more than 18,000 people in the state have lost coverage due to the work requirements that were first introduced last year.