U.S. Reps Shontel Brown, Emilia Sykes, Greg Landsman, and Joyce Beatty argue that stringent Medicaid work requirements will lead to coverage loss and increased hardship for struggling Ohioans.
Roughly 770,000 people are at risk of losing Medicaid under a new state budget proposed by Ohio Governor Mike DeWine. Newsweek spoke to an expert about how the cuts could affect those in Ohio.The new budget outlines language that could end the Medicaid expansion within the state,
Hundreds of thousands of Ohioans could lose health care coverage with a proposed repeal of Medicaid expansion in the state budget bill.
Those people are covered today thanks to Ohio’s 2013 decision via Gov. John Kasich to extend Medicaid – a social safety net program jointly funded by the federal and state government – to those earning up to 138% of the federal poverty line. For a family of four, that’s about $44,000 per year.
A Republican who left the Department of Government Efficiency initiative on President Donald Trump’s first day has launched his bid for Ohio governor.
Republicans have proposed lowering the federal share of Medicaid expansion costs, which would gut one of the Affordable Care Act’s major provisions.
On Monday afternoon, former Republican presidential candidate, short-lived adviser to President Donald Trump’s plans to slash government spending, and one-time “ libertarian-minded rap artist ” Vivek Ramaswamy announced his bid for Ohio governor.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (WOIO) - A provision in House Bill 96, or the budget for the next fiscal year, shows what would need to happen if the federal government pulls Medicaid funding to states like Ohio.
The Trump administration will likely allow states to impose Medicaid work requirements, but some states have found it to be complicated.
Estate Recovery seeks to obtain repayment for the cost of Medicaid benefits once a Medicaid eligible individual is deceased.
The nation's Medicaid Program, with its $880 billion budget, is an attractive target for Republican lawmakers in Washington who are looking for places to slash spending.
Hundreds of thousands of Ohioans could lose health care coverage, if Ohio lawmakers go through with a proposed repeal of Medicaid expansion in the state budget bill. Ohio representatives are ...
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