Senate, Medicaid
Digest more
Republicans say that able-bodied adults who don’t work would lose Medicaid coverage under the House tax-cuts-and-spending bill, while Democrats say the legislation would hurt vulnerable groups. The bill’s main target is those able-bodied adults,
1d
MiBolsilloColombia on MSNMedicaid users fear losing coverage as work mandates roll outMillions on Medicaid fear losing coverage as Congress weighs new work requirements—sparking concern over real-life consequences.
The AHA June 16 released a fact sheet with analysis on the impact to rural patients and hospitals from proposed Medicaid cuts by Congress. The analysis found that key Medicaid provisions in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (H.
The House budget bill being considered in the Senate will cut millions of people from Medicaid rolls. The best solution for getting these people care without sending more people to expensive,
A new Senate plan would tie Medicaid to 80-hour work requirements. Up to 5 million Americans could lose coverage, CBO warns.
A proposed $793 billion cut to federal Medicaid spending is projected to cause 16,642 premature deaths among adults each year as Americans lose coverage, according to a study published June 16 in the Annals of Internal Medicine.
2d
Econostrum on MSNMedicaid Enrollees Worry About Losing Health Coverage Under New Work RequirementsA new bill passed by the U.S. House of Representatives has sparked concern among millions of Medicaid recipients. If passed by the Senate, the bill would impose work requirements on many individuals receiving Medicaid benefits,
While updated cost estimates show Republicans’ multitrillion-dollar policy megabill could kick nearly 11 million people off Medicaid, a government watchdog says those recipients either have ways
Analysts say some working-class Americans who qualify for Medicaid could lose coverage because of churn from more frequent eligibility checks.
The majority of coverage losses under the bill would come from those who became eligible for Medicaid due to an expansion of the program under the Affordable Care Act — those enrollees would ...