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On July 4, Trump signed into law the major tax and spending bill that makes it harder for low-income workers to get Medicaid.
Trump's legislation will require more Medicaid patients to work. In two states that tried it, many lost coverage.
Bill requires “healthy” adults between the ages of 19 and 64 years to prove they had worked at least 80 hours in the month before enrollment.
KFF Health News’ Renuka Rayasam breaks down what you need to know about Medicaid work requirements. President Donald Trump signed legislation that mandates some Medicaid recipients prove they’re ...
Missouri has a long history of struggling to process MO HealthNet applications in a timely manner. As states prepare for new ...
South Dakota will withdraw its Medicaid expansion work requirements proposal now that President Donald Trump has signed ...
Georgia is one of 10 states that haven't expanded Medicaid health coverage to a broader pool of low-income adults. Instead, ...
Federal cuts could hit harder in states like Oregon that have embraced Medicaid expansion and added benefits to its ...
Ohio will get a boost in Medicaid funding, but patients could still lose care or face barriers under a new federal law.
Arizona's Medicaid work requirements could be implemented before the 2027 federal deadline. Arizona's proposal includes work requirements for able-bodied enrollees aged 19-55, lifetime limits and ...
Medicaid work requirements are part of the One Big Beautiful Bill spending law, but Arizona already had its own state work requirements plan.