Georgia Medicaid program with work requirement off to slow start even as thousands lose coverage
But public health experts and advocates say since it launched on
“If we’re talking about directed outreach to the population that would most likely be eligible and interested, I haven’t seen anything,” said
Heiman and other experts say the program’s slow start reflects fundamental flaws missing from Medicaid expansions in other states, including the extra burden of submitting and verifying work hours. And some critics note it's happening just as the state, as part of a federally mandated review, is kicking tens of thousands of people off its Medicaid rolls — at least some of whom could be eligible for Pathways.
“We’ve chosen a much more complicated and lengthy process that will take a long time even for the few folks who get coverage,” said
The Biden administration has already tried to revoke
A spokesman for the governor's office,
“While the federal government initiated and dictated a process for re-determining the qualifications of traditional Medicaid recipients,
The state's department of community health said it was engaging stakeholders, community partners and others to help get the word out about the program. It did not provide details about that effort.
“There's still some more work that we have to do for Pathways,”
The state launched Pathways just as it began a review of Medicaid eligibility following the end of the COVID-19 public health emergency. Federal law prohibited states from removing people from Medicaid during the three-year emergency.
The department of community health said it delayed the reevaluations of 160,000 people who were no longer eligible for traditional Medicaid but could qualify for Pathways to help them try to maintain health coverage. It was not immediately clear whether the state reached out to those people and helped guide them to apply for Pathways.
“From what we have seen thus far, they are not doing anything affirmatively to get these people enrolled in Pathways,” said
In contrast,
“States have a lot of tools that they can use to help make this process go more smoothly,” said
That broader Medicaid expansion was a key part of President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul in 2010, but many Republican governors, including Kemp, rejected it. In addition to imposing a work requirement, Pathways limits coverage to able-bodied adults earning up to 100% of the poverty line —
Kemp has argued full expansion would cost too much money. State officials and supporters of Pathways say the work requirement will also help transition Medicaid recipients to better, private health insurance, and working, studying or volunteering leads to improved health.
“I’m excited we’re moving forward in this direction,” said
Critics say many low-income people work informal jobs and have fluctuating hours that will make it hard for them to document the required 80 hours a month of work, volunteer activity, study or vocational rehabilitation. They also blast the lack of an exemption to the work requirement for parents and other caregivers.
For
Lucas said she had no idea Pathways started in July, but even if she did, she would not qualify because she has to take care of her 84-year-old father in
With risk factors for skin cancer, she worries about living without health insurance.
“I try to keep an eye on my own moles,” she said. “I’m increasingly anxious because I’m 46.”
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