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Morning Briefing

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Monday, Feb 2 2015

Full Issue

States Continue -- In Fits And Starts -- To Contemplate Medicaid Expansion

News outlets report on the latest developments in Missouri, Tennessee, Ohio and Iowa.

When Indiana became the latest state to expand its Medicaid program, the reaction across the health advocacy community was decidedly mixed. While the decision represented yet another step toward a goal of expanding government-funded health insurance to millions of lower-income Americans, it came at a price 鈥 one some advocates say may be too expensive to pay. (Shapiro, 2/2)

Advocates continue to push for the expansion of Medicaid to include Missourians who fall in the so-called 鈥渃overage gap.鈥 State legislators have made it clear that expansion is unlikely to happen this year either. But Medicaid advocate Richard von Glahn remains optimistic. (Phillips, 2/1)

Lawmakers convene a special session Monday to take up Republican Gov. Bill Haslam's proposal to extend health coverage to 280,000 low-income Tennesseans. The proposal is simple, but the politics are not. Haslam's plan is a two-year pilot project called Insure Tennessee. The deal calls on state hospitals to pay the $74 million state share to draw down $2.8 billion dollars in federal Medicaid money to offer coverage to uninsured Tennesseans. (Schelzig, 2/2)

As Iowa's modified Medicaid expansion hits the one-year anniversary mark, some enrollees will be asked to pay small monthly premiums because they have not yet completed a required physical exam and health questionnaire. For Gov. Terry Branstad, setting these health requirements was a key provision for expanding Medicaid in Iowa using funding from President Barack Obama's health care overhaul. The state received federal approval to make modifications to the traditional Medicaid terms, including setting health requirements and charging contributions. (Lucey, 2/1)

The much-anticipated debate over whether to continue Gov. John Kasich鈥檚 expansion of Medicaid through the next two-year state budget might be over before it starts. Kasich鈥檚 proposed two-year spending plan, to be unveiled today, won鈥檛 seek to reauthorize expanded eligibility guidelines that took effect last year and added 450,000 poor adults to the tax-funded health-care rolls. That doesn鈥檛 mean the governor no longer supports Medicaid expansion; he does, and he also wants to make changes to the program to save money and promote personal responsibility. But administration sources say they don鈥檛 believe lawmakers must reauthorize expansion because it is already in state law and remains so unless it is revoked. (Candisky, 2/2)

As Indiana won federal approval to move ahead with its version of Medicaid expansion, other Republican-governed states are lining up with their sketchbooks in hand. (Winfield Cunningham, 2/1)

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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