Sixty percent of kids who have lost medicaid coverage came from nine states where Republicans pushed against medicaid expansion, new data from the Biden administration shows.
Health and Human Services (HHS) secretary Xavier Becerra sent letters to nine states โ Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Montana, New Hampshire, Ohio, South Dakota and Texas โ that have refused Medicaid expansions urging lawmakers to take advantage of dozens of federal strategies and policies HHS has put forward. That includes 400 state flexibilities the agency has approved to make re-enrollment easier, such as expanding Medicaid.
A total of 10 states have refused Medicaid expansion and disenrolled more kids than all expansion states combined โ something that Becerra called alarming in his letters.
โBecause all children deserve to have access to comprehensive health coverage, I urge you to ensure that no child in your state who still meets eligibility criteria for Medicaid or CHIP loses their health coverage due to โred tapeโ or other avoidable reasons,โ Becerra wrote. โThis is especially important for communities of color and underserved communities across the country โ we know more than half of all children in Medicaid and CHIP are Hispanic, Black, Asian/Pacific Islander or American Indian and Alaska Native.โ
At least 2.2 million kids have been removed from Medicaid and the Childrenโs Health Insurance Program (CHIP) during a period of so-called โunwindingโ of pandemic-era coverage protections, though some experts estimate the number is higher.
States were temporarily required to keep people covered by Medicaid enrolled over the course of the COVID-19 public health emergency in exchange for greater federal funding. This effort helpedย reduce the number and rate of uninsured children to its second-lowest in U.S. history and reversed the steady increase of uninsured children in the country.
Enrollees face technical problems, clerical errors, administrative delays and…
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