Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Wyoming Medicaid Expansion Debate Continues
A range of citizens and professional groups urged Wyoming lawmakers on Monday to accept federal money to expand the federal Medicaid program to offer health insurance to thousands of low-income adults. The overwhelmingly Republican state Legislature has rejected the federal expansion offer repeatedly in recent years. Many critics say they don鈥檛 trust federal promises to continue to pay for the program. (1/20)
One of the key backers of a Senate bill to expand Wyoming鈥檚 Medicaid program is dismissing estimates that the bill would require higher administrative costs than the plan favored by Gov. Matt Mead. ... Sen. Charles Scott, R-Casper, is chairman of the Senate Labor, Health and Social Services Committee. He says this method would help control costs by making residents more responsible for their health care. (Chilton, 1/21)
A House Democrat introduced a package of bills Tuesday to counter Republicans blocking expansion of Medicaid in the state, to allow people with disabilities to exit the state鈥檚 overhauled Medicaid program and to abandon a plan for joining a multi-state compact to operate Medicare for the elderly. Rep. Jim Ward, a Wichita Democrat on the House Health and Human Services Committee, has been a fierce critic of Gov. Sam Brownback鈥檚 opposition to widening eligibility for Medicaid. (Carpenter, 1/20)
The state's largest physicians' organization says it is fully backing Republican Gov. Bill Haslam's Insure Tennessee proposal to extend subsidized health insurance coverage to an estimated 200,000 lower-income residents. Tennessee Medical Association officials said the group's Board of Trustees voted over the weekend in support of the plan. (1/20)
Florida health officials and lawmakers are facing a quandary over how to replace the likely annual loss of $1.3 billion in federal funds which compensate hospitals and providers that care for large numbers of uninsured and Medicaid patients. (1/20)
House Republicans say Gov. Terry McAuliffe has implemented a poorly conceived plan to provide health care coverage for low-income Virginians with severe mental illnesses. Republicans said on the House floor on Tuesday that McAuliffe's plan is a political ploy that was implemented without General Assembly approval by improperly invoking emergency authority. Their criticism signals the latest chapter in a long-running battle with McAuliffe over public health care spending for poor. (Suderman, 1/20)
States have broadened Medicaid coverage dramatically in the past decade, particularly as 27 states and the District of Columbia expanded coverage to adults last year under the health care law, according to a new report by the Georgetown Center for Children and Families and the Kaiser Family Foundation. But in almost all of the 23 states that did not broaden coverage as the health care law allows, adults who don鈥檛 have children often do not qualify for Medicaid, no matter how low their income is. (Adams, 1/20)
Democrats and health care advocates had hoped that Mr. Abbott would reverse Mr. Perry鈥檚 refusal to expand Medicaid in the state, which has the highest rate of uninsured residents in the country. But Mr. Abbott made it clear recently that he would not expand the government health insurance program for low-income and sick people, with a spokeswoman saying that he had 鈥渇ought Obamacare and will continue to fight against it.鈥 Such statements angered Democrats, many of whom worry that Mr. Abbott will continue to promote Mr. Perry鈥檚 small-government mantra, which they said fails to provide an adequate safety net for all. But Mr. Abbott鈥檚 approach has reassured Republicans, who control the Legislature and every top office and who argue that the Texas model has brought jobs and built a strong economy. (Fernandez, 1/20)