If you get health care coverage through Medicaid, you might be at risk of losing that coverage over the next year.
Roughly 84 million people are covered by the government-sponsored program, which has grown by 20 million people since January 2020, just before the COVID-19 pandemic hit.
But as states begin checking everyone’s eligibility for Medicaid for the first time in three years, as many as 14 million people could lose access to that health care coverage.
A look at why so many people may no longer qualify for the Medicaid program over the next year and what you need to know if you’re one of those people who relies on the program.
At the beginning of the pandemic, the federal government prohibited states from kicking people off Medicaid, even if they were no longer eligible. Before the pandemic, people would regularly lose their Medicaid coverage if they started making too much money to qualify for the program, gained health care coverage through their employer or moved into a new state.
That all stopped once COVID-19 started spreading across the country.
Over the next year, states will be required to start checking the eligibility again of every person who is on Medicaid. People will have to fill out forms to verify their personal information, including address, income and household size.
Wellness
2 mins read
Check your eligibility to see if you qualify for Medicaid; more security measures
Written by
Reynaldo Mena
— February 27, 2023
Trump’s Troop Deployment for Policing Resurrects Tactics from the King’s Era”
Domestic Spying? Border Patrol Wants AI to Watch American Cities
The Collapse of $165K Tech Jobs: Why Student Coders Are Turning to Fast Food Work
IMMIGRATION
“We Won’t Be Silent”: Immigrant Rights Groups Protest Raids with Marches and Boycotts
BUSINESS
How Top Digital Marketing AI Tools Are Redefining Growth
AI Is Changing the Rules of Digital Marketing—Here’s How to Stay Ahead
ChatGPT’s New Agent Mode Promises a Revolution for English or Spanish-Speaking Businesses
Tariffs, Tensions, and a Tumultuous Economy: California Sounds Alarm on Trump’s Trade Policies