Medicaid will undergo significant changes
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The recently passed GOP tax and spending law cuts about a trillion dollars from Medicaid over the next decade. Those cuts, according to the Congressional Budget Office and other independent analyses,
The Congressional Budget Office estimated that the House version of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act would reduce Medicaid enrollment and cause millions of people to become uninsured by 2034. It didn’t say that “5 million” of the people who are “going to lose insurance” would have “other insurance” so “they’re still insured,
Medicaid enrollees were not subject to federal work requirements previously, but going forward, nondisabled adults ages 18 to 64 without dependents will have to work, volunteer or
Medicaid recipients across North Carolina could soon feel the effects of sweeping changes under the recently passed “One Big Beautiful Bill Act.” The new law pl
Thirty-four Nevada hospitals across 13 counties are set to lose about $232 million as Medicaid qualifications get the squeeze.
"Traditional Medicare has roughly 20% cost-sharing," Sommers said. "For people who have both Medicaid and Medicare, Medicaid covers those costs. Also, traditional Medicare has no out-of-pocket cap, meaning someone can rack up tens of thousands of dollars of costs if they have a catastrophic illness, which Medicaid would cover if they have both."
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Soy Aire on MSNMedicaid is one of the main affected by Trump's reformThe cuts to Medicaid and other social safety net programs directly threaten the survival of already fragile rural hospitals. These facilities, which provide essential services to millions of low-income and disabled Americans,
Medicaid cuts in Trump’s tax bill will ‘devastate’ access to care in rural Pennsylvania, critics say
State officials estimate 310,000 Pennsylvanians will lose Medicaid coverage and anticipate strain at health facilities caused by federal budget cuts.
Florida did not expand Medicaid as most states did, so the impact may be lesser than other places, but reductions loom.
Disabled American Veterans — an advocacy group with one million members — warned new work requirements and eligibility rules for Medicaid could create hardships for former service members, particularly individuals who are homeless or without a steady income.