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Latest KFF Health News Stories

Move To End DACA Leaves Some Young Immigrants Fearing For Their Health

KFF Health News Original

The Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program made it possible for young adults who came into the country illegally as children to get jobs with insurance and, in some states including California, Medicaid. Now that coverage is in peril.   

California Sued For Allegedly Substandard Medi-Cal Care

KFF Health News Original

The lawsuit is a civil rights case on behalf of Latinos, who comprise nearly half of the program’s enrollees. But the advocates who filed it also hope to get class action certification for all Medi-Cal enrollees.

AARP: States Lag In Keeping Medicaid Enrollees Out Of Nursing Homes

KFF Health News Original

States are not doing enough to help elderly and disabled Medicaid enrollees receive services in homes and community locations instead of in nursing homes, where care is more expensive, AARP report says.

Fearing Deportation, Parents Worry About Undocumented Kids In Medicaid Program

KFF Health News Original

A 2016 California law allowed children without papers to sign up for full Medicaid benefits. More than 189,000 children have been covered, but some families now fear renewing coverage or signing up their kids for the first time.

CMS Gives States Until 2022 To Meet Medicaid Standards Of Care

KFF Health News Original

The Trump administration has given states three more years to meet federal standards aimed at helping elderly and disabled Medicaid enrollees receive services without being forced to go into nursing homes.

As Some Holdout States Revisit Medicaid Expansion, New Data Show It Pays Off

KFF Health News Original

Researchers concluded that because the federal government picked up so much of the tab of expanding eligibility for the low-income insurance program, expansion states didn’t have to skimp on other policy priorities to make ends meet.

CMS Chief To Sit Out Watershed Decision On Medicaid Work Mandate In Kentucky

KFF Health News Original

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Administrator Seema Verma will recuse herself from the agency’s decision-making on whether to approve Kentucky’s Medicaid waiver because she helped develop the proposal in her former job as a health policy consultant.