At least 61,000 Ohioans could lose Medicaid benefits if President-elect Donald Trump's team approves Ohio's request to add a work requirement for the public health insurance, according to state projections. The actual number could be as high as 450,000 ...
Proposed Medicaid work requirements mean more than 61,000 Ohioans could potentially lose their health insurance, if the incoming Trump administration allows Ohio Republican state leaders to proceed with their plan.
More than 61,000 Ohioans are at risk of losing their Medicaid coverage if President-elect Donald Trump’s new administration grants Ohio’s request to bring back
Donald Trump often touted changes to education, health care, tariffs and more on the campaign trail. What might those changes mean for Ohio?
Stock photo from Getty Images. Hundreds of thousands of Ohio children are enrolled in public health insurance such as Medicaid, which could be in for major changes and cuts as the new presidential administration takes hold with authors and proponents of ...
House Speaker Matt Huffman thinks the incoming Trump administration will be much more favorable to the ideas Republicans have for reforming Medicaid and generating more electricity.
The Ohio Department of Medicaid is again pursuing work requirements for members who accessed Medicaid through the expansion of the program under the Affordable Care Act. The proposal would require enrollees by employed,
In Ohio, where over 18% of the population resides in rural areas, Medicaid plays a critical role in ensuring families' access to healthcare.
With a new administration in Washington, state policymakers are reviving their zombie policy of Medicaid work requirements. Work requirements have been a bit of a political football over the past couple of administrations.
The burden of Republican-proposed Medicaid cuts could disproportionately fall on rural Arizonans who rely on the program.
At least 61,000 Ohioans could lose Medicaid benefits if President-elect Donald Trump's team approves Ohio's request to add a work requirement for the public health insurance, according to state ...
The rescinded order directed Medicare and Medicaid to test ways to lower drug costs for enrollees. Those tests hadn’t started, so current drug prices are unaffected.