The Ohio Department of Medicaid estimates at least 61,826 people will lose benefits if the Trump administration approves the request.
Letters: Medicaid and Medicare must stay. Increasing vehicle registration fees is ridiculous. Ramaswamy made at least one smart move.
Either we address our public health crisis or make it worse. Public health should transcend political ideology, and health care access should be protected, not restricted. Our communities depend on it,
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.
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 considering a measure in the budget that would repeal Mediciaid ...
Ohioans submitted more than 400 responses to the Ohio Department of Medicaid in response to a proposed rule that would require certain Medicaid recipients to be employed, in school or in a training program to keep their health coverage.
Here, Ramaswamy echoes former House Speaker Paul Ryan talking about his “Path to Prosperity” budget proposals or former President Ronald Reagan blaming people who needed government assistance on becoming “virtual wards of the state…that robs them of dignity and opportunity.”
Dayton, along with other U.S. representatives, recently reintroduced a bill, the Due Process Continuity of Care Act, which would allow people in custody to retain their Medicaid benefits while awaiting trial prior to being convicted.
Medicaid programs often operate under different names in states. For example, California's program is called Medi-Cal, Arizona's is the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System and Ohio's is ...
Republicans have proposed lowering the federal share of Medicaid expansion costs, which would gut one of the Affordable Care Act’s major provisions.
Estate Recovery seeks to obtain repayment for the cost of Medicaid benefits once a Medicaid eligible individual is deceased.
Ohio representatives are considering a measure in the budget bill that would repeal Medicaid expansion funding if federal medical assistance drops below 90%. The move would affect health care coverage for about 770,000 Ohioans and make it more difficult ...
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