Stimulus Sparks Changes in States’ Approach to Health Care
Filed under: Medicaid, Obama Administration, State Initiatives, Unemployment, Uninsured
Today, President Obama will release $15 billion in Medicaid funds to the states according to USA Today. As further reported by the NY Times, this is only one small portion of the $127 billion states will see over the next two and a half years for health care alone.
Attached to these funds will be the addition of a new category of individuals who qualify for Medicaid. Stimulus legislation allows “those who are receiving unemployment benefits, their spouses and child under 19,” to now be eligible for Medicaid, reports the Times. Further, states must abandon the use of any means test when unemployed individuals apply for Medicaid.
The affect this will have on states’ approaches to health care has not gone unnoticed. Republican Governor Mark Sanford (SC) has been a vocal skeptic of such changes to the extent that State Policy Network has described Sanford as fearing that the federal government is taking “yet another step in the march towards a government takeover of health care.”
But it’s not just Republicans that are at odds concerning the plan. Democratic Governor David Paterson (NY) is meeting with state legislators this week to attempt to reach an accord on how New York’s stimulus money will be spent on health care, reports Newsday. State legislators would like to see a share of the stimulus fill recent cuts to hospitals and other health care facilities and programs, but Governor Paterson would rather further reduce those state initiatives in the state budget.




Posts from Health Reform Watch have been cited by media sources throughout the country, including The New York Times, Washington Post, L.A. Times, Kaiser Health News, The Health Care Blog, NPR's Planet Money Blog, Duke Univ. Med. Center News, American Health Line Alerts, BusinessWeek.com, Concurring Opinions, Balkinization, The New England Journal of Medicine, Harvard's Nieman Foundation for Journalism, Las Vegas Sun, Maggie Mahar, Ezra Klein, Tom Geoghegan, and the official homepage of the Office of the Democratic Majority Leader of the House of Representatives, Steny Hoyer.