
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


When the pandemic began, Congress barred states from kicking people off Medicaid in exchange for additional federal funding. Enrollment surged nearly 20 percent over the next 16 months to 76.7 million, an all-time high. But state audits that happen when the health crisis is declared "over" could lead to as many as 15 million people, including 6 million children, losing their health insurance, according to an analysis from the Urban Institute.Now, states fear that winding down the expanded social safety net could prove messy — as many of the millions removed from the rolls may not know they’ve lost their health insurance or which options are available for new coverage. Megan Messerly reports.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
By POLITICO4.7
453453 ratings
When the pandemic began, Congress barred states from kicking people off Medicaid in exchange for additional federal funding. Enrollment surged nearly 20 percent over the next 16 months to 76.7 million, an all-time high. But state audits that happen when the health crisis is declared "over" could lead to as many as 15 million people, including 6 million children, losing their health insurance, according to an analysis from the Urban Institute.Now, states fear that winding down the expanded social safety net could prove messy — as many of the millions removed from the rolls may not know they’ve lost their health insurance or which options are available for new coverage. Megan Messerly reports.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

609 Listeners

1,514 Listeners

691 Listeners

112,031 Listeners

963 Listeners

308 Listeners

56,537 Listeners

104 Listeners

493 Listeners

206 Listeners

640 Listeners

6,445 Listeners

141 Listeners

390 Listeners

39 Listeners

11 Listeners

613 Listeners