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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, Sep 29 2025

Full Issue

NC's Medicaid 'HOP' Experiment Nixed; It 'Saved My Life,' One Recipient Says

Cancellation of the Healthy Opportunities Pilot, or HOP, has been especially disheartening for residents of Asheville and the surrounding counties, which are still recovering from Hurricane Helene that hit one year ago, The New York Times reported. More stories on Medicaid, SNAP, and hunger are from Maryland, California, Maine, Kansas, and elsewhere.

Five years ago, North Carolina embarked on a bold experiment to road test the idea that providing nutritious food, safe housing and transportation for doctors鈥 visits can help fragile Medicaid recipients stay healthy and avoid costly hospital stays. But the program is shutting down, an early casualty of the cuts to Medicaid that Congress approved in July. (Jacobs, 9/29)

At L. Gilbert Carroll Middle School in Robeson County, Principal Zach Jones watches the lunch line carefully, ensuring every student gets a tray. Many arrive hungry; breakfast and lunch at school may be the only meals they can count on.聽鈥淓very morning, every student comes through and gets a plate for breakfast. Even if they don鈥檛 eat it, they can share it. The same goes for lunch. That way our students who we know may have some food insecurities, are getting fed,鈥 he said. (Cotto, 9/28)

More on funding cuts and hunger 鈥

A nonprofit organization serving people with intellectual and developmental disabilities has filed a class-action lawsuit against the Maryland Department of Health on behalf of people who say their Medicaid benefits and services were unlawfully terminated. (Schumer, 9/27)

Local officials charged with administering the country鈥檚 social safety net said changes in Republicans鈥 One Big Beautiful Bill Act will tax an already strained system, leading to an untenable workload for underresourced workers and potentially leading some eligible support recipients to fall through the cracks. (Wendler, 9/27)

Phylis Allen spends her days looking for things. She searches for potatoes at Sam鈥檚 Club, cheap beets and ginger at Walmart and a local grocery store. She studies the weekly inventory from Good Shepherd, Maine鈥檚 only food bank, for good deals on butter and cheese.聽Every Monday morning, she shops at three different stores, keeping lists of prices in her head and remembering what particular clients want. On a recent trip to Sam鈥檚 Club, she was searching for affordable eggs.聽The diminutive 78-year-old food pantry director found them in a huge cooler. (Appleton Grant, 9/28)

When visiting his wife鈥檚 hometown of 400 in northern Kansas, Bob Lozier would joke with the owners of the grocery store that when they were ready to retire, he鈥檇 take over.聽He didn鈥檛 really expect to actually take over the store 鈥 but he did. In 2022, the owner of the only grocery store in Axtell decided to sell. The space had served as the town鈥檚 store since 1905. Suddenly, the residents of Axtell were facing a future without one. About 40 investors, including Lozier鈥檚 wife, came together to raise nearly $500,000 to demolish and rebuild the store. They found more funding through the Kansas Healthy Food Initiative, which provides financial assistance to rural grocers. And Axtell residents donated their labor and skills to finish the project in under a year. (Cunningham and Mesa, 9/26)

麻豆女优 Health News: Where Jobs Are Scarce, Over 1 Million People Could Dodge Trump鈥檚 Medicaid Work Rules聽

Millions of Medicaid enrollees may have a way out of the new federal work requirement 鈥 if they live in a county with high unemployment. By January 2027, President Donald Trump鈥檚 far-reaching domestic policy law will require many adult, nondisabled Medicaid enrollees in 42 states and Washington, D.C., to work or volunteer 80 hours a month or go to school. (Galewitz, 9/29)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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