As many as 80K Marylanders could lose Medicaid eligibility
“We are working through all of those numbers right now, but we believe it’s around 80,000," Eberle told a panel of lawmakers last month. "There’s different little discrepancies of those numbers. The numbers we’ve come up with is about 80,000 that would roll off, people that we’ll have to make sure we’ve got them covered.”
The change in federal policy is happening after the state made huge gains in covering the uninsured through Medicaid during the pandemic.
“We’ve had the largest number of folks put into Medicaid during this COVID (pandemic)," Eberle told Maryland Senate’s
The
“The communications campaign will include paid media, social media messaging, and other advertising and digital campaigns, in addition to targeted outreach by the MCOs,” the health department said in an email.
Across the
Eberle said
“We’ve continued to do those redeterminations every single month," Eberle said. "Now what that means is we didn’t terminate anyone, but we sent them notices. We said if you have a new email address, a new phone, come back, update us, so we’re better off in that we have current information.”
Still, some are concerned by the sheer number of people who could be affected.
State Sen.
“We are very concerned," Lam said in a recent interview. "We made a lot of strides during the pandemic. We don’t want the post-pandemic period to be a period where we see the greatest number of Marylanders thrown off our health insurance rolls.”
Schlattman, who is the deputy director of development and community outreach for Maryland Citizens’ Health Initiative, said the biggest challenge will be in reaching people who got enrolled in Medicaid for the very first time during the pandemic, which marked a unique period when they did not have to update their information.
“Other states are looking at a much larger shift and a much bigger bottleneck in getting people enrolled," Schlattman said.
Trump Org Pays $1.6 Million Fine for Tax Fraud Conviction: A clerk confirmed the checks didn't bounce.
Pandemic Medicaid will be ending soon, Beshear says [The Times-Tribune, Corbin, Ky.]
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News