Medicaid

Latest KFF Health News Stories

Private Providers In Texas Fight Back Over Service Change

KFF Health News Original

For years, the state paid private providers who care for people with disabilities to handle their clients’ case management. But an 11th-hour change inserted into the budget last session stripped them of that responsibility, giving it instead to quasi-governmental Mental Retardation Authorities – and potentially creating a conflict of interest.

Replace The Tattered Medicaid Long-Term Care Safety Net

KFF Health News Original

Medicaid, the state-federal health program that also pays for nearly half of all long-term care services for the frail elderly and younger people with disabilities, is in big trouble.

The Roadmap Lives

KFF Health News Original

Rep. Paul Ryan, R- Wis., took the courageous step of going first with a bold plan — his Roadmap — to fundamentally restructure the tax and entitlement policies that threaten to push the federal budget past the breaking point. Now others, even some from the other side of the aisle, are joining him in sponsoring similar plans.

The Texas Medicaid Scenario — Why It’s Never Going To Happen

KFF Health News Original

Withdrawing from Medicaid would be political suicide. Despite post-election bluster, no governor or legislature will seriously attempt such a maneuver because of the related administrative, economic and organizational difficulties.

Can Florida Really Alter Medicaid?

KFF Health News Original

Florida Republican leaders said Tuesday they want to overhaul the Medicaid program and don’t want the federal government tying their hands. But their message may fall on deaf ears in Washington.

New Deficit Report Recommends Seniors Pay More For Medicare

KFF Health News Original

A blue-ribbon bipartisan panel of experts, chaired by former budget director Alice Rivlin and former Sen. Pete Domenici, recommends major changes to the way the government pays for health care.

Dr. Donald Berwick – A Resource Guide

KFF Health News Original

Dr. Donald Berwick, head of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, is well-liked and known as a passionate advocate for improving the health care system. Some Republicans accuse him of favoring health care rationing – a charge Democrats dismiss as nonsense.

Text: Berwick’s Prepared Testimony – ‘I Pledge To Be Open And Transparent’

KFF Health News Original

Tomorrow, Dr. Donald Berwick, the adminstrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) is scheduled to testify before the Senate Committee on Finance. Here is an advance copy of his prepared statement.

2014 Question Looms: Could Medicaid Recipients Buy Insurance On Exchanges?

KFF Health News Original

As budget-weary state officials contemplate dropping out of the Medicaid program, a potentially game-changing question has arisen in Washington: Would poor people who lose coverage get subsidies to buy private coverage?

Families Fight To Care For Disabled Kids At Home

KFF Health News Original

In states like Illinois, parents can provide at-home care for children with severe illnesses and Medicaid foots the bill. But the funding disappears the minute they turn 21, forcing families to make a painful choice: Find the money to pay for sometimes exorbitant health care costs or send their children to a nursing home.

Hospitals, Inc., A Kaiser Health News Series

KFF Health News Original

Hospitals play an enormous role in the health care system; they’re a crucial part of the public health safety net and an important community resource. But they are expensive. Hospital costs make up the largest portion of the health spending in this country.

A Hole In The Safety Net: Texas Medicaid Cuts Threaten Services For Disabled

KFF Health News Original

The Texas Department of Aging and Disability Services’ baseline budget request eliminates financing for some disabled people who are waiting to receive services in private homes, group homes or other community settings.

Health Reform Facing Early Legal Tests

KFF Health News Original

A number of interest groups, state officials and ordinary citizens are seeking to have the health care law struck down in federal court, and action is heating up this week.