North Carolina’s $10B Medicaid Challenge: Pay For Other States Or Take Federal Money?
State taxpayers could spend more than $10 billion by 2022 to provide medical coverage for low-income residents of other states while getting nothing in return.
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State taxpayers could spend more than $10 billion by 2022 to provide medical coverage for low-income residents of other states while getting nothing in return.
Call center wait times climb even as the application backlog mounts and the state reports the single largest monthly drop in Medicaid enrollment in June.
An agency that ministers to immigrant and Arab-American community in Dearborn, Michigan, faces challenges enrolling some people in health coverage.
Jackson Health System offers free and reduced-cost treatment for those who qualify, but advocacy groups complain it fails to meet requirements for charity care.
Freestanding emergency departments have been proposed in Georgia as a potential solution for struggling rural hospitals.
The state has one of the largest numbers of children who are Medicaid-eligible but still uninsured.
Consumers in most other states have more information about, and control over, health insurance prices and plans.
Some fear helping some people with their bills might keep them from getting government-subsidized insurance plans.
Emergency-room visits have increased at many hospitals. A shortage of primary-care doctors is one reason.
After signing up hundreds of thousands of Medi-Cal enrollees, the state now needs to figure out how to care for them.
But insurers oppose many of the premium assistance efforts, saying they would lead to sicker enrollees who will raise costs for everyone.
Vermont plays the maverick again in trying to be the first state to implement a single-payer health care system.
With many of their patients now insured under the law, most W. Va. free clinics are choosing to get paid by Medicaid.
Cuyahoga County, Ohio, created its own Medicaid program for 28,000 residents. So far, E.R. visits have dropped 60 percent.
Ballerinas risk injury and high health care costs every time they perform. Allynne Noelle, 32, principal ballerina with the Los Angeles Ballet, says the new health care law offers some relief.
Sandra Lopez, 41, owns Las Fajitas, a popular Mexican restaurant in Newport Beach, Calif. She has to make decisions about health insurance coverage for her family and her business under the Affordable Care Act.
The HHS is contacting hundreds of thousands of people with subsidized health plans bought under the ACA to verify their eligibility,
When you pirouette for a living, injury is nearly certain. But one veteran says coverage under the nation's health law provided some relief.
But more than 40 percent of those who lacked coverage last fall still don't have insurance.
The plaintiffs accuse state officials of depriving thousands of residents of health care coverage.
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