Housing, Nutrition Programs In Peril Across US As Trump Pulls Back Medicaid Social Services
During his first administration, President
Some poor and disabled Medicaid patients became eligible for benefits, including security deposits and first month's rent for housing, rides to medical appointments, wheelchair ramps, and even prescriptions for fresh fruits and vegetables.
Such experimental initiatives to improve the health of vulnerable Americans while saving taxpayers on costly medical procedures and expensive emergency room care are booming nationally. Without homes or healthy food, people risk getting sicker, becoming homeless, and experiencing even more trouble controlling chronic conditions such as diabetes and heart disease.
Former President
In Trump's second term, his administration is throwing participating states from
"This administration believes that the health-related social needs guidance distracted the Medicaid program from its core mission: providing excellent health outcomes for vulnerable Americans," CMS spokesperson
"This decision prevents the draining of resources from Medicaid for potentially duplicative services that are already provided by other well-established federal programs, including those that have historically focused on food insecurity and affordable housing," Howden added, referring to food stamps and low-income housing vouchers provided through other government agencies.
Trump, however, has also proposed axing funding for low-income housing and food programs administered by agencies including the departments of
The pullback has led to chaos and confusion in states that have expanded their Medicaid programs, with both liberal and conservative leaders worried that the shift will upend multibillion-dollar investments already underway. Social problems such as homelessness and food insecurity can cause — or worsen — physical and behavioral health conditions, leading to sky-high health care spending. Medical care delivered in hospitals and clinics, for instance, accounts for only roughly 15% of a person's overall health, while a staggering 85% is influenced by social factors such as access to healthy food and shelter for sleep, said
Health care experts warn the disinvestment will come at a price.
"It will just lead to more death, more suffering, and higher health care costs," said
The Trump administration announced in a
Last month, the administration told states that these services, which can also include high-speed internet and storage units, should not be part of Medicaid.
Future waiver requests allowing Medicaid to provide social services — a liberal philosophy — will be considered on a "case-by-case basis," the administration said. Rather, it has signaled a conservative shift toward requiring most Medicaid beneficiaries to prove that they're working or trying to find jobs, which puts an estimated 36 million Americans at risk of losing their health coverage.
"What they're arguing is Medicaid has been expanded far beyond basic health care and it needs to be cut back to provide only basic coverage to those most desperately in need," said
Although states have not received formal guidance to end their social experiments, Peterson and other health policy researchers expect the administration not to renew waivers, which typically run in five-year intervals. Worse, legal experts say programs underway could be halted early.
Evidence supporting social investments by Medicaid is still nascent. An expansion in
Since the CalAIM program launched in 2022, it has served only a small fraction of the state's nearly 15 million Medicaid beneficiaries, with roughly 577,000 referrals for benefits. Yet it has improved and even saved the lives of some of those lucky enough to get help, including
"When I got diabetes, I didn't know what to do and I had a hard time getting to my medical appointments," said Jones, who lost his housing this year when his mom died but received services through his
"We are fully committed," said
Health insurers, which deliver Medicaid coverage and receive greater funding to cover these additional benefits, say they're worried the Trump administration will end or curtail the programs. "If we do things the same old way, we're just going to generate the same old results — people getting sicker and health care costs continuing to rise," said
Industry leaders say the expansion is already changing lives.
"We believe wholeheartedly that housing is health, food is health, so seeing these programs disappear would be devastating," said
"Climate change and housing instability are huge indicators of poor health," said
But even as the Trump administration curtails waivers, it is retaining discretion to provide social services in Medicaid, just on a smaller scale. Supporters say it's fair to scrutinize where to draw the line on taxpayer spending, arguing that there isn't always a direct health connection.
"We're seeing these things increase, with the free rent, and we're seeing some states pay for free internet, paying for furniture," said
Current
While it's too soon to know whether these experiments have been effective elsewhere in
State health officials also touted the economic benefits of driving business to family farms, home improvement contractors, and community-based organizations providing housing and social services.
"I welcome the challenge of demonstrating the effectiveness of our programs. It's making for healthier people and healthier budgets," said
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