Center on Budget & Policy Priorities: 'Biden Directs Federal Agencies to Reconsider Trump Policy Under Which Thousands Lost Medicaid Coverage'
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Under the Trump policy, announced in 2018, states could submit proposals for demonstration projects letting them take coverage away from people who didn't document that they worked or participated in work activities like job training for a specified number of hours each month -- something that the federal government never previously permitted.
Other states, too, would have suffered large coverage losses if they had fully implemented their demonstration projects.
Large coverage losses, including among people who are working or who should be eligible for exemptions, are unavoidable under these policies. People with disabilities and other serious health needs -- especially mental health conditions or substance use disorders -- lose coverage because they struggle with paperwork to claim exemptions. Working people lose coverage due to both paperwork barriers and the nature of low-wage work, like fluctuating hours. (That's why nearly half of working low-income adults wouldn't be able to document at least 80 hours of work each month, as many state demonstrations required.) And when people lose coverage, they face financial hardship and lose access to medications and other needed care, which can be catastrophic for those with chronic physical or mental health conditions.
Taking away coverage also fails to help people find and keep jobs. One study found evidence that people losing Medicaid under
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