Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
TennCare Director Speaks About Political Difficulties Of Expanding Medicaid
TennCare Director Darin Gordon gave medical students insight this week on a difficult task 鈥 finding a way for Tennessee to benefit from federal tax dollars already being collected from state residents. ... He said the discussions were ongoing, including dialogue this week. But he noted that an expansion would be a hard sell in Tennessee given the state鈥檚 experience in the mid-1990s, when it opened up TennCare under 鈥渢he most ambitious expansion of health insurance the country had ever seen鈥 鈥 a program the state could not financially support and had to scale back. (Wilemon, 11/20)
[Former Virginia State Sen. Phillip P. Puckett's] resignation exacerbated an increasingly partisan atmosphere in Richmond. Its reverberations are likely to make it more difficult for [Gov. Terry] McAuliffe to work with a GOP-controlled legislature to get anything done during the remainder of his term. The Washington Post interviewed more than a dozen people and reviewed scores of e-mails and text and voice messages to piece together new details about how Puckett鈥檚 resignation unfolded. (Vozzella, 11/22)
A year into New York's operation of a medical insurance exchange, more than half of the people with new coverage qualified for Medicaid 鈥 the federal program for the poor 鈥 and many didn't know they were eligible until the push under the Affordable Care Act. Overall, 370,604 people were enrolled with commercial and nonprofit insurers, 525,283 in Medicaid; and 64,875 in the state's Child Health Plus coverage for families with moderate incomes. That's a total of 960,762. (Matthews and Thompson, 11/22)
Post-election soul-searching by Kansas Democrats includes disagreement over whether Medicaid expansion should have been a larger part of the party鈥檚 strategy. The Democrats lost all statewide races for the second straight time and lost another five House seats to drop their number in that chamber to 27. The defeats were part of a national wave of Republican election wins, but they have nonetheless led to talk within the Kansas Democratic Party about what could have been done differently. (Marso, 11/21)