5M+ could lose Medicaid coverage
Under an emerging Republican plan to require some Medicaid recipients to work, between 4.6 million and 5.2 million adults ages 19 to 55 could lose their health care coverage, according to a new analysis.
The study, conducted by
The report suggests that most of those people would lose coverage not because they aren't complying with the rules, but because they would struggle to report their compliance to the state.
"Most adults who would lose eligibility for federal Medicaid funding are working, engaged in work-related activities, or could qualify for exemptions not readily identifiable through state databases but could still face disenrollment because of the reporting requirements," it states. The study identified several barriers to reporting, including lack of broadband access and lack of transportation.
Forty states plus the
Traditional Medicaid insurance was mainly available to children and their caregivers, people with disabilities and pregnant women. The ACA, commonly known as Obamacare, allowed states to extend coverage to adults making up to 138% of the federal poverty level — about
Nationwide, more than 21 million people with low incomes have health insurance because of expanded Medicaid eligibility.
The budget doesn't contain specifics on how that target would be met but work requirements are a likely money-saving option. A 2023 analysis from the nonpartisan



County closer to acquiring garage
Krispy Kreme owner to acquire Roanoke-based Shenandoah Life
Advisor News
- Millennials are inheriting billions and they want to know what to do with it
- What Trump Accounts reveal about time and long-term wealth
- Wellmark still worries over lowered projections of Iowa tax hike
- Wellmark still worries over lowered projections of Iowa tax hike
- Could tech be the key to closing the retirement saving gap?
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- How to elevate annuity discussions during tax season
- Life Insurance and Annuity Providers Score High Marks from Financial Pros, but Lag on User Friendliness, JD Power Finds
- An Application for the Trademark “TACTICAL WEIGHTING” Has Been Filed by Great-West Life & Annuity Insurance Company: Great-West Life & Annuity Insurance Company
- Annexus and Americo Announce Strategic Partnership with Launch of Americo Benchmark Flex Fixed Indexed Annuity Suite
- Rethinking whether annuities are too late for older retirees
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- Findings from Belmont University College of Pharmacy Provide New Insights into Managed Care and Specialty Pharmacy (Comparing rates of primary medication nonadherence and turnaround time among patients at a health system specialty pharmacy …): Drugs and Therapies – Managed Care and Specialty Pharmacy
- Study Data from Ohio State University Update Knowledge of Managed Care (Preventive Care Utilization, Employer-sponsored Benefits, and Influences On Utilization By Healthcare Occupational Groups): Managed Care
- Recent Findings from Cornell University Provides New Insights into Managed Care (The Law of Large Umbrellas: Away From Risk Reduction In Health Insurance): Managed Care
- New Findings on Cancer from University of Texas Arlington Summarized (Systematic Review of Health Insurance and Survival Among Adolescent and Young Adult Cancer Patients): Cancer
- ‘Absolutely ferocious’: Idaho introduces plan to repeal Medicaid expansion
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News
- Kansas City Life: Q4 Earnings Snapshot
- Gulf Guaranty Life Insurance Company Trademark Application for “OPTIBEN” Filed: Gulf Guaranty Life Insurance Company
- Marv Feldman, life insurance icon and 2011 JNR Award winner, passes away at 80
- Continental General Partners with Reframe Financial to Bring the Next Evolution of Reframe LifeStage to Market
- ASK THE LAWYER: Your beneficiary designations are probably wrong
More Life Insurance News