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Medicaid coverage gap

In the context of American public healthcare policy, the Medicaid coverage gap refers to uninsured people who do not qualify for marketplace assistance under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and reside in states that have not adopted Medicaid expansion under the ACA. People within this categorization have incomes above the eligibility limits for Medicaid set by their state of residence but fall below the federal poverty line (FPL), resulting in deficient access to affordable health insurance. As of March 2023, an estimated 1.9 million Americans in 10 states are within the Medicaid coverage gap according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. Approximately 97 percent of this cohort lives in the Southern U.S., with a majority living in Texas and Florida; Texas has the largest population of people in the cohort, accounting for 41 percent of people in the coverage gap.[2]

ACA Medicaid expansion by state.[1]
  Not adopted
  Adopted
  Implemented

Expansion of Medicaid was a key aspect of the ACA when it was signed into law by President Barack Obama in March 2010, supporting the legislation's goal of ensuring universal health care in the U.S. by raising the income threshold for Medicaid eligibility to 138 percent of the FPL among nonelderly adults. States choosing to participate in Medicaid expansion would also have additional Medicaid costs fully covered by the federal government in the first three years of expansion slated to begin in 2014, with a stepwise decrease in the federal government's share to 90 percent in 2020 and thereafter. Opponents of the legislation asserted that the federal government's conditioning of additional funding for Medicaid on adoption of expansion was unconstitutionally coercive. The Supreme Court held in National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius that adoption of Medicaid expansion by states was effectively optional, and that states could continue with their preexisting Medicaid requirements without risk of defunding. The decision not to implement Medicaid expansion in some states after the ACA took effect in 2014 led to a "gap" in coverage for residents of those states with incomes too low for subsidized insurance in the ACA's newly established health insurance marketplaces and incomes too high to qualify for the non-expanded Medicaid in their states. Only 24 states adopted Medicaid expansion when ACA initially took effect. As of March 2023, 40 states and the District of Columbia have adopted Medicaid expansion, leaving 10 states that have not.

Population characteristics edit

As initially passed, the ACA was designed to provide universal health care in the U.S.: those with employer-sponsored health insurance would keep their plans, those with middle-income and lacking employer-sponsored health insurance could purchase subsidized insurance via newly established health insurance marketplaces, and those with low-income would be covered by the expansion of Medicaid. However, the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius (2012) rendered state adoption of Medicaid expansion optional. Governors in several Republican-leaning states announced that they would not expand Medicaid in response, leading to a gap in insurance coverage.[3] The Medicaid coverage gap includes nonelderly people with incomes that are below the federal poverty line (FPL), making them ineligible for subsidized marketplace insurance under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), but have incomes higher than their state's limit for Medicaid eligibility as their state has not adopted Medicaid expansion as prescribed by the ACA.[4][2] The gap also includes childless adults who are ineligible for Medicaid regardless of income in these states (with the exception of Wisconsin, which permits Medicaid coverage via waiver).[2]

As of March 2023, an estimated 1.9 million people are in the Medicaid coverage gap, residing in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kansas, Mississippi, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. Out of the cohort, 97 percent live in the Southern United States where most of the non-expansion states are located, with Texas, Florida, and Georgia accounting for nearly three-quarters of the Medicaid coverage gap. Childless adults account for 76 percent of the coverage gap, and people of color account for around 61 percent of the cohort. Within the ten states that have not opted for Medicaid expansion, the median income limit for eligibility in the traditional Medicaid program is 38 percent of the FPL.[a] The uninsured rate within the non-expansion states was 15.4 percent in March 2023 compared to 8.1 percent in expansion states.[2]

Medicaid expansion edit

Medicaid expansion by state[1]
Subdivision Status Implemented
Alabama Not adopted
Alaska Implemented September 1, 2015
Arizona Implemented January 1, 2014
Arkansas Implemented January 1, 2014
California Implemented January 1, 2014
Colorado Implemented January 1, 2014
Connecticut Implemented January 1, 2014
Delaware Implemented January 1, 2014
District of Columbia Implemented January 1, 2014
Florida Not adopted
Georgia Not adopted
Hawaii Implemented January 1, 2014
Idaho Implemented January 1, 2020
Illinois Implemented January 1, 2014
Indiana Implemented February 1, 2015
Iowa Implemented January 1, 2014
Kansas Not adopted
Kentucky Implemented January 1, 2014
Louisiana Implemented July 1, 2016
Maine Implemented January 10, 2019
Maryland Implemented January 1, 2014
Massachusetts Implemented January 1, 2014
Michigan Implemented April 1, 2014
Minnesota Implemented January 1, 2014
Mississippi Not adopted
Missouri Implemented October 1, 2021
Montana Implemented January 1, 2016
Nebraska Implemented October 1, 2020
Nevada Implemented January 1, 2014
New Hampshire Implemented August 15, 2014
New Jersey Implemented January 1, 2014
New York Implemented January 1, 2014
North Carolina Implemented December 1, 2023
North Dakota Implemented January 1, 2014
Ohio Implemented January 1, 2014
Oklahoma Implemented July 1, 2021
Pennsylvania Implemented January 1, 2015
Rhode Island Implemented January 1, 2014
South Carolina Not adopted
South Dakota Implemented July 1, 2023
Tennessee Not adopted
Texas Not adopted
Utah Implemented January 1, 2020
Vermont Implemented January 1, 2014
Virginia Implemented January 1, 2019
Washington Implemented January 1, 2014
West Virginia Implemented January 1, 2014
Wisconsin Not adopted
Wyoming Not adopted
Uninsured rates in the U.S.
 
Comparison of uninsured rates between states based on their Medicaid expansion participation in 2017 and 2018
 
Percentage of individuals in the U.S. without health insurance between 1963–2015

Affordable Care Act provision edit

Prior to passage of the ACA, Medicaid did not extend general eligibility to low-income adults without child dependants,[5] though the federal government could authorize waivers for states to expand medicaid coverage;[6]: 2  by 2012, eight states provided full Medicaid benefits to this group.[7] The Medicaid statute also permitted states to cover some cohorts (termed "optional eligibility groups") without a permit.[6]: 2  However, some states set stringent income eligibility thresholds well below the federal poverty level (FPL) for caretakers and parents of minors.[5] In line with its previous efforts to curtain the expansion of the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP), the Bush administration imposed additional restrictions on states attempting to raise the income cap for Medicaid eligibility in 2008.[8] Healthcare reform was a key issue in campaigns for the 2008 United States presidential election.[9] A poll of delegates conducted by the New York Times and CBS News found that 94 percent of Democratic delegates viewed expanding healthcare coverage to all Americans as more important than lowering taxes, compared to 7 percent for Republican delegates.[10][11]

The ACA was signed into law in March 2010 by President Barack Obama after passing with narrow majorities in the House and Senate on nearly party lines.[12][13] Softening the eligibility requirements for Medicaid was a central goal of the ACA,[14] forming a two-pronged policy along with subsidized private insurance via health insurance marketplaces to expand health insurance coverage in the U.S.[15][7][3] The Medicaid expansion provision of the ACA allowed states to lower the income requirements for Medicaid eligibility, extending eligibility to non-pregnant adults under the age of 65 and not entitled to Medicare with incomes of up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level.[b][18][7] Within this cohort were three primary categories of adults: adults without dependent children, parents with dependent children, and adults with disabilities.[6] The ACA sought to eliminate categorical criteria barring these groups from Medicaid eligibility and standardize requirements across states.[19] The expansion provision also stipulated that the federal government would cover an enhanced share of the additional Medicaid expenditure incurred by states as a result of Medicaid expansion.[20][1] The expansion was to be enacted 2014, with the federal government funding 100 percent of states' costs through 2016 and then gradually declining its share stepwise to 90 percent in 2020 and onwards.[21][7] The ACA granted federal support to states classified as "expansion states" based on the following requirements:[22]: 273 

...a State is an expansion state if, on the date of the enactment of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, the State offers health benefits coverage statewide to parents and nonpregnant, childless adults whose income is at least 100 percent of the poverty line, that is not dependent on access to employer coverage, employer contribution, or employment and is not limited to premium assistance, hospital-only benefits, a high deductible health plan, or alternative benefits under a demonstration program authorized under section 1938.

The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated that Medicaid expansion under ACA as originally passed would cover 17 million uninsured Americans by 2022.[7] The newly covered adult population in participating states were required to receive health coverage under an Alternative Benefit Plan (ABP) comparable or equivalent to either the state's traditional Medicaid package or a benchmark plan chosen by the state,[23][24] with mandatory coverage in ten categories of health benefits deemed essential by the ACA.[23] Those deemed medically frail would be given the option of choosing either the ABP or the traditional benefit package. The ABP would also cover screening and diagnostic and treatment services for enrollees younger than 21 years.[23] While Medicaid expansion was to come into force in 2014, the ACA also provided states the option to expand Medicaid early and receive matching funds from the federal government in raising the income cap for Medicaid as prescribed by ACA. States could also receive matching funds by expanding Medicaid early through other mechanisms and obtaining a Section 1115 waiver.[25]

National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius (2012) edit

Although Medicaid expansion under ACA was a de jure voluntary initiative for states, it was intended to be implemented nationally.[26] Opponents of the legislation described the conditioning of the increased funding for Medicaid on states opting into expansion as unconstitutionally coercive, making Medicaid expansion effectively mandatory.[26][23] The federal government typically covered only 50–83 percent of Medicaid costs prior to ACA,[26] with its share determined by the state's average per capita income.[23] The elevated share for Medicaid expansion implied over $500 billion in additional federal funding between 2014 and 2020.[26] In National Federation of Independent Business, the plaintiffs challenged the constitutionality of the ACA and contended that the Medicaid expansion provision was coercive. The U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Florida ruled in favor of the federal government on Medicaid expansion, and this ruling was upheld 2–1 in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit.[27] While the Supreme Court largely upheld the constitutionality of the ACA, the court ruled in a 7–2 decision that the Medicaid expansion provision was unconstitutionally coercive.[5][27] The court established that the federal government could not condition funding for a preexisting program (i.e. Medicaid) on state participation in what the court classified as a new program (i.e. Medicaid expansion).[28] However, the court also ruled 5–4 that Medicaid expansion without the federal threat of defunding Medicaid in non-compliant states fell within the powers afforded by the Spending Clause to Congress.[27] Adoption of Medicaid expansion by individual states was effectively optional as a result of National Federation of Independent Business.[29] States opting out of Medicaid expansion could continue with their preexisting Medicaid requirements without the risk of federal defunding while states accepting the enhanced federal funding would be required to participate in Medicaid expansion.[30] In July 2012, the CBO revised its projection of Americans covered by Medicaid expansion by 2022 to 11 million as a result of the ruling.[7]

When the ACA fully came into effect in January 2014, 24 states and the District of Columbia adopted Medicaid expansion.[c][31] Most states implemented Medicaid expansion via expansion of their Medicaid programs while some states did so by other means such as the use of health savings accounts.[6] The incongruous adoption of Medicaid expansion was a result of several factors, including partisanship and pressure from private insurance stakeholders.[32][19] Primarily Republican resistance to Medicaid expansion prevented adoption of the provision in other states, with opponents characterizing expansion as an overreach of the federal government into a free market space and arguing that expansion would raise healthcare costs and lower coverage quality.[33] The American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, which passed in March 2021, compelled the federal government to cover an additional 5 percent of state expenditure incurred by Medicaid expansion atop the 90 percent stipulated by ACA to incentivize the then-12 non-expansion states to adopt Medicaid expansion, in addition to Missouri and Oklahoma which had adopted but not implemented expansion at the time.[34][35] As of March 2023, 40 states and the District of Columbia have adopted Medicaid expansion while 10 have not.[1]

States adopting Medicaid expansion after ACA enactment edit

Maine edit

On November 16, 2012, Governor of Maine Paul LePage declared that he would not be implementing Medicaid expansion in Maine; at the time, Medicaid expansion in his state would expand health coverage to 37,000 people.[36] Proponents for expansion in Maine argued that it would bolster rural hospitals and create new jobs; opponents cited previous problems with the state budget following earlier expansions of Medicaid in the state prior to the ACA[37] LePage remained a stalwart objector of Medicaid expansion thereafter,[38] asserting that expansion would divert funds from other state programs and often summarizing his stance as "free is expensive to somebody."[39] He vetoed five Medicaid expansion bills passed by the Maine legislature between 2013 and 2017.[37][39]

On October 13, 2016, Maine Equal Justice Partners, a progressive advocacy group, announced that it would begin canvassing for signatures to hold a referendum on Medicaid expansion in the state.[40][41] Maine Equal Justice Partners stated that over 65,000 signatures were collected on Election Day in 2016, enough to place Medicaid expansion on the ballot in a subsequent election.[42] Expansion of Medicaid was introduced to the ballot for the November 2017 election as Question 2.[43] Around $2 million was spent on campaigning in support of the ballot measure compared to less than $300,000 for opposition to the measure.[39] Question 2 passed with 59 percent of the vote,[38] making Maine the first state to approve Medicaid expansion by ballot measure.[37] Support was strongest in southern and coastal Maine. At the time of passage, the expanded eligibility for Medicaid would encompass 70,000 more adults.[37] Passage of the measure compelled the state to enact expansion legislation 30 days after finalization of the election results and submit its expansion plan to the United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) within 90 days of legislative enactment.[44]

Despite the successful ballot initiative, LePage indicated that Medicaid expansion would not be implemented until the state legislature was able to fund Maine's share of the expansion without increasing taxes, using the state's rainy day fund, or curtailing services for the elderly and disabled.[38][44] Sara Gideon, the Speaker of the Maine House of Representatives, responded by stating that "Any attempts to illegally delay or subvert [expansion legislation]" would "be fought with every recourse at our disposal."[44] The Maine legislature failed to overturn LePage's veto of the accompanying legislation in July 2018.[45] Maine Equal Justice Partners sued to force the LePage administration to accept federal funding for Medicaid expansion,[45] resulting in an order from the Kennebec County Superior Court compelling LePage to submit an expansion plan to the HHS. However, LePage continued to defy Medicaid expansion, stating that he would “go to jail" before implementing Medicaid expansion without prior appropriation of state funding;[46] his administration appealed the court order to the Maine Supreme Judicial Court, which dismissed the appeal in August 2018.[47][48] The administration filed the requisite documents for Medicaid expansion to the federal government the following month, but LePage concurrently wrote a letter encouraging CMS to reject expansion in Maine.[49] Maine Equal Justice Partners subsequently filed suit against the administration in the Maine Business and Consumer Court, seeking to rescind portions of Maine's Medicaid expansion application that asked the federal government to deny expansion.[50]

Janet Mills won the 2018 Maine gubernatorial election; Mills had campaigned on Medicaid expansion and stated the expansion would be implemented immediately at the start of her governorship following LePage's departure.[51][52] The outgoing administration continued to stall expansion of Medicaid; following another legal challenge, the Maine Superior Court set February 1, 2019, as the start date for enrollments into expanded Medicaid.[53][54] Shortly after taking office, Mills signed an executive order on January 3, 2019, directing the expansion of Medicaid and opening enrollments for the program.[55] Medicaid expansion was implemented in Maine on January 10, 2019, with coverage provided to those eligible retroactive to July 2018.[1]

Oklahoma edit

 
Results by county for State Question 802 (2020) in Oklahoma

Following the Supreme Court's ruling in National Federation of Independent Business in 2012, Oklahoma Governor Mary Fallin stated she was skeptical of Medicaid expansion in Oklahoma but would assess the possibility.[56] Fallin later put off the decision until after the 2012 election.[57][58] Tom Coburn, the junior U.S. senator from Oklahoma, wrote a letter to Fallin in October 2012 warning against expanding the state's Medicaid program.[59] On November 19, 2012, Fallin announced that the state would not be moving forward with Medicaid expansion, citing high costs and the resulting need for budget cuts to other government programs.[60][61]

In 2016, Fallin and Nico Gomez, the executive director of the Oklahoma Health Care Authority (OHCA), proposed creating a subsidized private option for the Medicaid coverage gap administered through the OHCA's Insure Oklahoma program, mitigating expansion of Medicaid.[62][63] Termed the "Medicaid Rebalancing Act of 2020", the plan was to be partly federally funded.[64] However, the proposal lost momentum in the Oklahoma Senate following increasing opposition and was tabled without a vote;[65][66][63] Gomez, who championed the proposal, resigned in August 2016.[65]

In December 2018, in the wake of the 2018 midterm elections, Democrats in the Oklahoma House of Representatives announced that they would legislatively push for Medicaid expansion.[67] A grassroots effort to put forth a Medicaid expansion ballot initiative began in April 2019 as opposition from Republican legislators and newly elected governor Kevin Stitt made expansion via the legislature unlikely.[63][68][69] The conservative think tank Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs challenged the proposal in the Oklahoma Supreme Court, arguing that the language of the associated petition was inaccurate and that the proposed policy was unconstitutional; the court ruled in June 2019 that the petition could continue collecting signatures.[70] Canvassing to qualify the initiative on the ballot began on July 31, 2019.[69][71] The ballot initiative campaign submitted 313,677 signatures to the Oklahoma Secretary of State in October 2019, exceeding the 178,000 needed to place the measure on the ballot and setting a state record for signatures collected for an initiative petition.[72]

As canvassing for the ballot initiative was ongoing, a bipartisan legislative working group intended to address Medicaid expansion and healthcare coverage began convening and regularly meeting.[69][73] Both Stitt and the working group sought to devise alternatives to the Medicaid expansion outlined by the initiative.[72] Stitt unveiled his proposal, dubbed SoonerCare 2.0, in March 2020; the plan involved expansion of the state's Medicaid program including work requirements and tiered monthly premiums and copays.[74] His plan was to serve as the state's use of CMS's Healthy Adult Opportunity program with an anticipated rollout in July 2020.[75][63][76] The ballot initiative appeared on the ballot for the 2020 primaries as State Question 802, with support from several health organizations and Native American tribes in the state.[77] The measure passed by less than a percentage-point margin, compelling the state to implement Medicaid expansion by July 1, 2021.[78] Stitt withdrew his healthcare proposal following passage of the initiative.[69]

South Dakota edit

 
Results by county for Constitutional Amendment D (2022) in South Dakota

The Republican-controlled South Dakota Legislature long opposed Medicaid expansion.[79] Proponents of Medicaid expansion in the state emphasized the benefits to healthcare access and rural hospitals, particularly in the aftermath of the COVID-19 epidemic, while critics argued that expanding Medicaid would be fiscally irresponsible, lead to tax increases, and discourage able-bodied adults from seeking work.[80][81] In October 2014, telephone poll conducted by Mason-Dixon Polling & Strategy of 800 registered voters in the state found that respondents supported Medicaid expansion as outlined in ACA by a 45–37 percent margin, with an additional 18 percent of respondents undecided.[82] In 2015, South Dakota Governor Dennis Daugaard proposed extending Medicaid coverage to 55,000 residents and raising health spending for Native Americans. However, a deal could not be reached between the state and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services before the end of then-President Obama's term.[79]

A coalition of advocacy groups, including Dakotans for Health, began canvassing for signatures in 2021 to place a constitutional amendment to expand Medicaid on the ballot for the 2022 election.[79][83][84] The state legislature drafted a resolution that would put to vote a constitutional amendment requiring subsequent ballot measures to garner 60 percent of the vote if the measure created new taxes or required more than $10 million in state appropriations within the first five years of enactment.[84] In March 2021, the South Dakota Senate voted to expedite voting on the measure, moving it from the 2022 general election to the 2022 primaries.[85] The associated amendment was added to the ballot for the 2022 primaries as Constitutional Amendment C.[86] Supporters of Medicaid expansion viewed passage of Amendment C as an attempt to prevent Medicaid expansion from passing via ballot initiative;[87] Dakotans for Health unsuccessfully challenged the resolution in the South Dakota Supreme Court in May 2021.[88] Medicaid expansion was placed on the 2022 general election ballot as Constitutional Amendment D after garnering 38,244 signatures.[89]

Concurrently, Republican State Senator Wayne Steinhauer introduced a proposal to the South Dakota Legislature to expand Medicaid, arguing that the wording of Amendment D was not desirable and proposing withdrawal of the ballot measure if his bill was passed.[90] His Republican colleagues argued that expanding the program would expand the government and pull funding away from public schools. The Republican-led South Dakota Senate voted against the proposal by a 12–13 vote on February 15, 2022.[91] Amendment C later failed by a 67.4–32.6 percentage point margin in the 2022 primary election, ensuring that Amendment D could pass by majority vote.[92] Governor Kristi Noem opposed Medicaid expansion, but stated in a September 2022 debate for the 2022 gubernatorial election that Medicaid expansion would be implemented if passed by ballot initiative, provided that it was "written constitutionally."[80] Amendment D passed by a 12.4-percentage point margin, with 56.2 percent of voters supporting the measure.[80] The passage of Constitutional Amendment D set into motion the expansion of Medicaid to 42,500 new adult and nonelderly South Dakotans by July 1, 2023.[93] People within the Medicaid coverage gap are expected to account for approximately a third of the newly eligible population.[80] The state Department of Social Services estimated that 52,000 people would enroll in the expanded program.[93]

Utah edit

Medicaid expansion in Utah remained an undecided issue in the state government in the aftermath of NFIB v. Sebelius.[94][95] The Republican-controlled state legislature was staunchly opposed to Medicaid expansion due to its costs and distrust of the federal government.[94] While Governor Gary Herbert elected to wait for an independent analysis of Medicaid expansion to make a decision, Republican lawmakers sought to pass a bill prohibiting Medicaid expansion without approval from the state legislature;[96][97] the Utah House of Representatives approved the bill by a 46–27 vote on March 11, 2013.[98]

Medicaid expansion in Utah took effect on January 1, 2020.[99]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ As of 2023, this corresponds to an annual income of $9,447 for parents in a family of three. In Texas, the state with the most stringent requirements, the income limit was $3,977 for parents in a family of three.[2]
  2. ^ As of 2023, this corresponds to an individual income of $20,120.[1] The statutory income requirement for Medicaid expansion was 133 percent and based on modified adjusted gross income (MAGI). Combining the 133 percent threshold with the statutory 5 percent income disregard under ACA results in a 138 percent effective income threshold.[16]: 1804 [17]: 11 
  3. ^ Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and West Virginia adopted Medicaid expansion concurrent with the enactment of the ACA on January 1, 2014.[1]

References edit

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medicaid, coverage, context, american, public, healthcare, policy, refers, uninsured, people, qualify, marketplace, assistance, under, affordable, care, reside, states, that, have, adopted, medicaid, expansion, under, people, within, this, categorization, have. In the context of American public healthcare policy the Medicaid coverage gap refers to uninsured people who do not qualify for marketplace assistance under the Affordable Care Act ACA and reside in states that have not adopted Medicaid expansion under the ACA People within this categorization have incomes above the eligibility limits for Medicaid set by their state of residence but fall below the federal poverty line FPL resulting in deficient access to affordable health insurance As of March 2023 update an estimated 1 9 million Americans in 10 states are within the Medicaid coverage gap according to the Kaiser Family Foundation Approximately 97 percent of this cohort lives in the Southern U S with a majority living in Texas and Florida Texas has the largest population of people in the cohort accounting for 41 percent of people in the coverage gap 2 ACA Medicaid expansion by state 1 Not adopted Adopted ImplementedExpansion of Medicaid was a key aspect of the ACA when it was signed into law by President Barack Obama in March 2010 supporting the legislation s goal of ensuring universal health care in the U S by raising the income threshold for Medicaid eligibility to 138 percent of the FPL among nonelderly adults States choosing to participate in Medicaid expansion would also have additional Medicaid costs fully covered by the federal government in the first three years of expansion slated to begin in 2014 with a stepwise decrease in the federal government s share to 90 percent in 2020 and thereafter Opponents of the legislation asserted that the federal government s conditioning of additional funding for Medicaid on adoption of expansion was unconstitutionally coercive The Supreme Court held in National Federation of Independent Business v Sebelius that adoption of Medicaid expansion by states was effectively optional and that states could continue with their preexisting Medicaid requirements without risk of defunding The decision not to implement Medicaid expansion in some states after the ACA took effect in 2014 led to a gap in coverage for residents of those states with incomes too low for subsidized insurance in the ACA s newly established health insurance marketplaces and incomes too high to qualify for the non expanded Medicaid in their states Only 24 states adopted Medicaid expansion when ACA initially took effect As of March 2023 update 40 states and the District of Columbia have adopted Medicaid expansion leaving 10 states that have not Contents 1 Population characteristics 2 Medicaid expansion 2 1 Affordable Care Act provision 2 2 National Federation of Independent Business v Sebelius 2012 2 3 States adopting Medicaid expansion after ACA enactment 2 3 1 Maine 2 3 2 Oklahoma 2 3 3 South Dakota 2 3 4 Utah 3 See also 4 Notes 5 ReferencesPopulation characteristics editAs initially passed the ACA was designed to provide universal health care in the U S those with employer sponsored health insurance would keep their plans those with middle income and lacking employer sponsored health insurance could purchase subsidized insurance via newly established health insurance marketplaces and those with low income would be covered by the expansion of Medicaid However the U S Supreme Court ruling in National Federation of Independent Business v Sebelius 2012 rendered state adoption of Medicaid expansion optional Governors in several Republican leaning states announced that they would not expand Medicaid in response leading to a gap in insurance coverage 3 The Medicaid coverage gap includes nonelderly people with incomes that are below the federal poverty line FPL making them ineligible for subsidized marketplace insurance under the Affordable Care Act ACA but have incomes higher than their state s limit for Medicaid eligibility as their state has not adopted Medicaid expansion as prescribed by the ACA 4 2 The gap also includes childless adults who are ineligible for Medicaid regardless of income in these states with the exception of Wisconsin which permits Medicaid coverage via waiver 2 As of March 2023 update an estimated 1 9 million people are in the Medicaid coverage gap residing in Alabama Florida Georgia Kansas Mississippi South Carolina Tennessee Texas Wisconsin and Wyoming Out of the cohort 97 percent live in the Southern United States where most of the non expansion states are located with Texas Florida and Georgia accounting for nearly three quarters of the Medicaid coverage gap Childless adults account for 76 percent of the coverage gap and people of color account for around 61 percent of the cohort Within the ten states that have not opted for Medicaid expansion the median income limit for eligibility in the traditional Medicaid program is 38 percent of the FPL a The uninsured rate within the non expansion states was 15 4 percent in March 2023 update compared to 8 1 percent in expansion states 2 Medicaid expansion editMedicaid expansion by state 1 Subdivision Status ImplementedAlabama Not adopted Alaska Implemented September 1 2015Arizona Implemented January 1 2014Arkansas Implemented January 1 2014California Implemented January 1 2014Colorado Implemented January 1 2014Connecticut Implemented January 1 2014Delaware Implemented January 1 2014District of Columbia Implemented January 1 2014Florida Not adopted Georgia Not adopted Hawaii Implemented January 1 2014Idaho Implemented January 1 2020Illinois Implemented January 1 2014Indiana Implemented February 1 2015Iowa Implemented January 1 2014Kansas Not adopted Kentucky Implemented January 1 2014Louisiana Implemented July 1 2016Maine Implemented January 10 2019Maryland Implemented January 1 2014Massachusetts Implemented January 1 2014Michigan Implemented April 1 2014Minnesota Implemented January 1 2014Mississippi Not adopted Missouri Implemented October 1 2021Montana Implemented January 1 2016Nebraska Implemented October 1 2020Nevada Implemented January 1 2014New Hampshire Implemented August 15 2014New Jersey Implemented January 1 2014New York Implemented January 1 2014North Carolina Implemented December 1 2023North Dakota Implemented January 1 2014Ohio Implemented January 1 2014Oklahoma Implemented July 1 2021Pennsylvania Implemented January 1 2015Rhode Island Implemented January 1 2014South Carolina Not adopted South Dakota Implemented July 1 2023Tennessee Not adopted Texas Not adopted Utah Implemented January 1 2020Vermont Implemented January 1 2014Virginia Implemented January 1 2019Washington Implemented January 1 2014West Virginia Implemented January 1 2014Wisconsin Not adopted Wyoming Not adopted Uninsured rates in the U S nbsp Comparison of uninsured rates between states based on their Medicaid expansion participation in 2017 and 2018 nbsp Percentage of individuals in the U S without health insurance between 1963 2015 Affordable Care Act provision edit Prior to passage of the ACA Medicaid did not extend general eligibility to low income adults without child dependants 5 though the federal government could authorize waivers for states to expand medicaid coverage 6 2 by 2012 eight states provided full Medicaid benefits to this group 7 The Medicaid statute also permitted states to cover some cohorts termed optional eligibility groups without a permit 6 2 However some states set stringent income eligibility thresholds well below the federal poverty level FPL for caretakers and parents of minors 5 In line with its previous efforts to curtain the expansion of the State Children s Health Insurance Program SCHIP the Bush administration imposed additional restrictions on states attempting to raise the income cap for Medicaid eligibility in 2008 8 Healthcare reform was a key issue in campaigns for the 2008 United States presidential election 9 A poll of delegates conducted by the New York Times and CBS News found that 94 percent of Democratic delegates viewed expanding healthcare coverage to all Americans as more important than lowering taxes compared to 7 percent for Republican delegates 10 11 The ACA was signed into law in March 2010 by President Barack Obama after passing with narrow majorities in the House and Senate on nearly party lines 12 13 Softening the eligibility requirements for Medicaid was a central goal of the ACA 14 forming a two pronged policy along with subsidized private insurance via health insurance marketplaces to expand health insurance coverage in the U S 15 7 3 The Medicaid expansion provision of the ACA allowed states to lower the income requirements for Medicaid eligibility extending eligibility to non pregnant adults under the age of 65 and not entitled to Medicare with incomes of up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level b 18 7 Within this cohort were three primary categories of adults adults without dependent children parents with dependent children and adults with disabilities 6 The ACA sought to eliminate categorical criteria barring these groups from Medicaid eligibility and standardize requirements across states 19 The expansion provision also stipulated that the federal government would cover an enhanced share of the additional Medicaid expenditure incurred by states as a result of Medicaid expansion 20 1 The expansion was to be enacted 2014 with the federal government funding 100 percent of states costs through 2016 and then gradually declining its share stepwise to 90 percent in 2020 and onwards 21 7 The ACA granted federal support to states classified as expansion states based on the following requirements 22 273 a State is an expansion state if on the date of the enactment of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act the State offers health benefits coverage statewide to parents and nonpregnant childless adults whose income is at least 100 percent of the poverty line that is not dependent on access to employer coverage employer contribution or employment and is not limited to premium assistance hospital only benefits a high deductible health plan or alternative benefits under a demonstration program authorized under section 1938 111th United States Congress Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act The Congressional Budget Office CBO estimated that Medicaid expansion under ACA as originally passed would cover 17 million uninsured Americans by 2022 7 The newly covered adult population in participating states were required to receive health coverage under an Alternative Benefit Plan ABP comparable or equivalent to either the state s traditional Medicaid package or a benchmark plan chosen by the state 23 24 with mandatory coverage in ten categories of health benefits deemed essential by the ACA 23 Those deemed medically frail would be given the option of choosing either the ABP or the traditional benefit package The ABP would also cover screening and diagnostic and treatment services for enrollees younger than 21 years 23 While Medicaid expansion was to come into force in 2014 the ACA also provided states the option to expand Medicaid early and receive matching funds from the federal government in raising the income cap for Medicaid as prescribed by ACA States could also receive matching funds by expanding Medicaid early through other mechanisms and obtaining a Section 1115 waiver 25 National Federation of Independent Business v Sebelius 2012 edit Although Medicaid expansion under ACA was a de jure voluntary initiative for states it was intended to be implemented nationally 26 Opponents of the legislation described the conditioning of the increased funding for Medicaid on states opting into expansion as unconstitutionally coercive making Medicaid expansion effectively mandatory 26 23 The federal government typically covered only 50 83 percent of Medicaid costs prior to ACA 26 with its share determined by the state s average per capita income 23 The elevated share for Medicaid expansion implied over 500 billion in additional federal funding between 2014 and 2020 26 In National Federation of Independent Business the plaintiffs challenged the constitutionality of the ACA and contended that the Medicaid expansion provision was coercive The U S District Court for the Northern District of Florida ruled in favor of the federal government on Medicaid expansion and this ruling was upheld 2 1 in the U S Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit 27 While the Supreme Court largely upheld the constitutionality of the ACA the court ruled in a 7 2 decision that the Medicaid expansion provision was unconstitutionally coercive 5 27 The court established that the federal government could not condition funding for a preexisting program i e Medicaid on state participation in what the court classified as a new program i e Medicaid expansion 28 However the court also ruled 5 4 that Medicaid expansion without the federal threat of defunding Medicaid in non compliant states fell within the powers afforded by the Spending Clause to Congress 27 Adoption of Medicaid expansion by individual states was effectively optional as a result of National Federation of Independent Business 29 States opting out of Medicaid expansion could continue with their preexisting Medicaid requirements without the risk of federal defunding while states accepting the enhanced federal funding would be required to participate in Medicaid expansion 30 In July 2012 the CBO revised its projection of Americans covered by Medicaid expansion by 2022 to 11 million as a result of the ruling 7 When the ACA fully came into effect in January 2014 24 states and the District of Columbia adopted Medicaid expansion c 31 Most states implemented Medicaid expansion via expansion of their Medicaid programs while some states did so by other means such as the use of health savings accounts 6 The incongruous adoption of Medicaid expansion was a result of several factors including partisanship and pressure from private insurance stakeholders 32 19 Primarily Republican resistance to Medicaid expansion prevented adoption of the provision in other states with opponents characterizing expansion as an overreach of the federal government into a free market space and arguing that expansion would raise healthcare costs and lower coverage quality 33 The American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 which passed in March 2021 compelled the federal government to cover an additional 5 percent of state expenditure incurred by Medicaid expansion atop the 90 percent stipulated by ACA to incentivize the then 12 non expansion states to adopt Medicaid expansion in addition to Missouri and Oklahoma which had adopted but not implemented expansion at the time 34 35 As of March 2023 update 40 states and the District of Columbia have adopted Medicaid expansion while 10 have not 1 States adopting Medicaid expansion after ACA enactment edit Maine edit On November 16 2012 Governor of Maine Paul LePage declared that he would not be implementing Medicaid expansion in Maine at the time Medicaid expansion in his state would expand health coverage to 37 000 people 36 Proponents for expansion in Maine argued that it would bolster rural hospitals and create new jobs opponents cited previous problems with the state budget following earlier expansions of Medicaid in the state prior to the ACA 37 LePage remained a stalwart objector of Medicaid expansion thereafter 38 asserting that expansion would divert funds from other state programs and often summarizing his stance as free is expensive to somebody 39 He vetoed five Medicaid expansion bills passed by the Maine legislature between 2013 and 2017 37 39 On October 13 2016 Maine Equal Justice Partners a progressive advocacy group announced that it would begin canvassing for signatures to hold a referendum on Medicaid expansion in the state 40 41 Maine Equal Justice Partners stated that over 65 000 signatures were collected on Election Day in 2016 enough to place Medicaid expansion on the ballot in a subsequent election 42 Expansion of Medicaid was introduced to the ballot for the November 2017 election as Question 2 43 Around 2 million was spent on campaigning in support of the ballot measure compared to less than 300 000 for opposition to the measure 39 Question 2 passed with 59 percent of the vote 38 making Maine the first state to approve Medicaid expansion by ballot measure 37 Support was strongest in southern and coastal Maine At the time of passage the expanded eligibility for Medicaid would encompass 70 000 more adults 37 Passage of the measure compelled the state to enact expansion legislation 30 days after finalization of the election results and submit its expansion plan to the United States Department of Health and Human Services HHS within 90 days of legislative enactment 44 Despite the successful ballot initiative LePage indicated that Medicaid expansion would not be implemented until the state legislature was able to fund Maine s share of the expansion without increasing taxes using the state s rainy day fund or curtailing services for the elderly and disabled 38 44 Sara Gideon the Speaker of the Maine House of Representatives responded by stating that Any attempts to illegally delay or subvert expansion legislation would be fought with every recourse at our disposal 44 The Maine legislature failed to overturn LePage s veto of the accompanying legislation in July 2018 45 Maine Equal Justice Partners sued to force the LePage administration to accept federal funding for Medicaid expansion 45 resulting in an order from the Kennebec County Superior Court compelling LePage to submit an expansion plan to the HHS However LePage continued to defy Medicaid expansion stating that he would go to jail before implementing Medicaid expansion without prior appropriation of state funding 46 his administration appealed the court order to the Maine Supreme Judicial Court which dismissed the appeal in August 2018 47 48 The administration filed the requisite documents for Medicaid expansion to the federal government the following month but LePage concurrently wrote a letter encouraging CMS to reject expansion in Maine 49 Maine Equal Justice Partners subsequently filed suit against the administration in the Maine Business and Consumer Court seeking to rescind portions of Maine s Medicaid expansion application that asked the federal government to deny expansion 50 Janet Mills won the 2018 Maine gubernatorial election Mills had campaigned on Medicaid expansion and stated the expansion would be implemented immediately at the start of her governorship following LePage s departure 51 52 The outgoing administration continued to stall expansion of Medicaid following another legal challenge the Maine Superior Court set February 1 2019 as the start date for enrollments into expanded Medicaid 53 54 Shortly after taking office Mills signed an executive order on January 3 2019 directing the expansion of Medicaid and opening enrollments for the program 55 Medicaid expansion was implemented in Maine on January 10 2019 with coverage provided to those eligible retroactive to July 2018 1 Oklahoma edit nbsp Results by county for State Question 802 2020 in Oklahoma For 60 70 50 60 Against 70 80 60 70 50 60 Following the Supreme Court s ruling in National Federation of Independent Business in 2012 Oklahoma Governor Mary Fallin stated she was skeptical of Medicaid expansion in Oklahoma but would assess the possibility 56 Fallin later put off the decision until after the 2012 election 57 58 Tom Coburn the junior U S senator from Oklahoma wrote a letter to Fallin in October 2012 warning against expanding the state s Medicaid program 59 On November 19 2012 Fallin announced that the state would not be moving forward with Medicaid expansion citing high costs and the resulting need for budget cuts to other government programs 60 61 In 2016 Fallin and Nico Gomez the executive director of the Oklahoma Health Care Authority OHCA proposed creating a subsidized private option for the Medicaid coverage gap administered through the OHCA s Insure Oklahoma program mitigating expansion of Medicaid 62 63 Termed the Medicaid Rebalancing Act of 2020 the plan was to be partly federally funded 64 However the proposal lost momentum in the Oklahoma Senate following increasing opposition and was tabled without a vote 65 66 63 Gomez who championed the proposal resigned in August 2016 65 In December 2018 in the wake of the 2018 midterm elections Democrats in the Oklahoma House of Representatives announced that they would legislatively push for Medicaid expansion 67 A grassroots effort to put forth a Medicaid expansion ballot initiative began in April 2019 as opposition from Republican legislators and newly elected governor Kevin Stitt made expansion via the legislature unlikely 63 68 69 The conservative think tank Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs challenged the proposal in the Oklahoma Supreme Court arguing that the language of the associated petition was inaccurate and that the proposed policy was unconstitutional the court ruled in June 2019 that the petition could continue collecting signatures 70 Canvassing to qualify the initiative on the ballot began on July 31 2019 69 71 The ballot initiative campaign submitted 313 677 signatures to the Oklahoma Secretary of State in October 2019 exceeding the 178 000 needed to place the measure on the ballot and setting a state record for signatures collected for an initiative petition 72 As canvassing for the ballot initiative was ongoing a bipartisan legislative working group intended to address Medicaid expansion and healthcare coverage began convening and regularly meeting 69 73 Both Stitt and the working group sought to devise alternatives to the Medicaid expansion outlined by the initiative 72 Stitt unveiled his proposal dubbed SoonerCare 2 0 in March 2020 the plan involved expansion of the state s Medicaid program including work requirements and tiered monthly premiums and copays 74 His plan was to serve as the state s use of CMS s Healthy Adult Opportunity program with an anticipated rollout in July 2020 75 63 76 The ballot initiative appeared on the ballot for the 2020 primaries as State Question 802 with support from several health organizations and Native American tribes in the state 77 The measure passed by less than a percentage point margin compelling the state to implement Medicaid expansion by July 1 2021 78 Stitt withdrew his healthcare proposal following passage of the initiative 69 South Dakota edit nbsp Results by county for Constitutional Amendment D 2022 in South Dakota For 80 90 70 80 60 70 50 60 Against 60 70 50 60 The Republican controlled South Dakota Legislature long opposed Medicaid expansion 79 Proponents of Medicaid expansion in the state emphasized the benefits to healthcare access and rural hospitals particularly in the aftermath of the COVID 19 epidemic while critics argued that expanding Medicaid would be fiscally irresponsible lead to tax increases and discourage able bodied adults from seeking work 80 81 In October 2014 telephone poll conducted by Mason Dixon Polling amp Strategy of 800 registered voters in the state found that respondents supported Medicaid expansion as outlined in ACA by a 45 37 percent margin with an additional 18 percent of respondents undecided 82 In 2015 South Dakota Governor Dennis Daugaard proposed extending Medicaid coverage to 55 000 residents and raising health spending for Native Americans However a deal could not be reached between the state and the U S Department of Health and Human Services before the end of then President Obama s term 79 A coalition of advocacy groups including Dakotans for Health began canvassing for signatures in 2021 to place a constitutional amendment to expand Medicaid on the ballot for the 2022 election 79 83 84 The state legislature drafted a resolution that would put to vote a constitutional amendment requiring subsequent ballot measures to garner 60 percent of the vote if the measure created new taxes or required more than 10 million in state appropriations within the first five years of enactment 84 In March 2021 the South Dakota Senate voted to expedite voting on the measure moving it from the 2022 general election to the 2022 primaries 85 The associated amendment was added to the ballot for the 2022 primaries as Constitutional Amendment C 86 Supporters of Medicaid expansion viewed passage of Amendment C as an attempt to prevent Medicaid expansion from passing via ballot initiative 87 Dakotans for Health unsuccessfully challenged the resolution in the South Dakota Supreme Court in May 2021 88 Medicaid expansion was placed on the 2022 general election ballot as Constitutional Amendment D after garnering 38 244 signatures 89 Concurrently Republican State Senator Wayne Steinhauer introduced a proposal to the South Dakota Legislature to expand Medicaid arguing that the wording of Amendment D was not desirable and proposing withdrawal of the ballot measure if his bill was passed 90 His Republican colleagues argued that expanding the program would expand the government and pull funding away from public schools The Republican led South Dakota Senate voted against the proposal by a 12 13 vote on February 15 2022 91 Amendment C later failed by a 67 4 32 6 percentage point margin in the 2022 primary election ensuring that Amendment D could pass by majority vote 92 Governor Kristi Noem opposed Medicaid expansion but stated in a September 2022 debate for the 2022 gubernatorial election that Medicaid expansion would be implemented if passed by ballot initiative provided that it was written constitutionally 80 Amendment D passed by a 12 4 percentage point margin with 56 2 percent of voters supporting the measure 80 The passage of Constitutional Amendment D set into motion the expansion of Medicaid to 42 500 new adult and nonelderly South Dakotans by July 1 2023 93 People within the Medicaid coverage gap are expected to account for approximately a third of the newly eligible population 80 The state Department of Social Services estimated that 52 000 people would enroll in the expanded program 93 Utah edit Medicaid expansion in Utah remained an undecided issue in the state government in the aftermath of NFIB v Sebelius 94 95 The Republican controlled state legislature was staunchly opposed to Medicaid expansion due to its costs and distrust of the federal government 94 While Governor Gary Herbert elected to wait for an independent analysis of Medicaid expansion to make a decision Republican lawmakers sought to pass a bill prohibiting Medicaid expansion without approval from the state legislature 96 97 the Utah House of Representatives approved the bill by a 46 27 vote on March 11 2013 98 Medicaid expansion in Utah took effect on January 1 2020 99 See also edit nbsp United States portal nbsp Politics portal nbsp Law portal nbsp Medicine portalMedicaid Medicaid estate recovery Patient Protection and Affordable Care ActNotes edit As of 2023 update this corresponds to an annual income of 9 447 for parents in a family of three In Texas the state with the most stringent requirements the income limit was 3 977 for parents in a family of three 2 As of 2023 update this corresponds to an individual income of 20 120 1 The statutory income requirement for Medicaid expansion was 133 percent and based on modified adjusted gross income MAGI Combining the 133 percent threshold with the statutory 5 percent income disregard under ACA results in a 138 percent effective income threshold 16 1804 17 11 Arizona California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Hawaii Illinois Iowa Kentucky Maryland Massachusetts Minnesota Nevada New Jersey New York North Dakota Ohio Rhode Island Vermont Washington and West Virginia adopted Medicaid expansion concurrent with the enactment of the ACA on January 1 2014 1 References edit a b c d e f g Status of State Medicaid Expansion Decisions Interactive Map KFF Map is updated as changes occur Click on states for details a b c d e Rudowitz Robin Drake Patrick Tolbert Jennifer Damico Anthony March 31 2023 How Many Uninsured Are in the Coverage Gap and How Many Could be Eligible if All States Adopted the Medicaid Expansion Medicaid KFF Archived from the original on May 25 2023 Retrieved May 25 2023 a b Gunn Dwyer June 14 2017 January 26 2016 The Medicaid Coverage Gap Persists Pacific Standard Grist Retrieved May 25 2023 The Medicaid Coverage Gap State Fact Sheets Center on Budget and Policy Priorities Retrieved May 24 2023 a b c Rosenbaum Sara Westmoreland Timothy M August 2012 The Supreme Court s Surprising Decision On The Medicaid Expansion How Will The Federal Government And States Proceed Health Affairs 31 8 1663 1672 doi 10 1377 hlthaff 2012 0766 PMID 22869643 S2CID 10008906 a b c d Mitchell Alison December 30 2014 Medicaid The Federal Medical Assistance Percentage FMAP PDF Congressional Research Service Retrieved May 24 2023 via Federation of American Scientists a b c d e f Musumeci MaryBeth August 2012 A Guide to the Supreme Court s Decision on the ACA s Medicaid Expansion PDF Report KFF Retrieved May 25 2023 Pear Robert January 4 2008 U S Curtailing Bids to Expand Medicaid Rolls New York Times Retrieved May 25 2023 Lake Celinda C Crittenden Robert A Mermin David May 2008 Health Care In The 2008 Election Engaging The Voters Health Affairs 27 3 693 698 doi 10 1377 hlthaff 27 3 693 PMID 18474959 Blendon Robert J Altman Drew E Benson John M Brodie Mollyann Buhr Tami Deane Claudia Buscho Sasha November 6 2008 Voters and Health Reform in the 2008 Presidential Election New England Journal of Medicine 359 19 2050 2061 doi 10 1056 NEJMsr0807717 PMID 18974307 Calmes Jackie Thee Megan August 31 2008 G O P Rallies in Support of McCain Poll Shows New York Times Retrieved May 25 2023 Haselswerdt Jake August 2017 Expanding Medicaid Expanding the Electorate The Affordable Care Act s Short Term Impact on Political Participation Journal of Health Politics Policy and Law 42 4 667 695 doi 10 1215 03616878 3856107 PMID 28483811 Jacobs Lawrence R Callaghan Timothy October 2013 Why States Expand Medicaid Party Resources and History Journal of Health Politics Policy and Law 38 5 1023 1050 doi 10 1215 03616878 2334889 PMID 23794741 Mazurenko Olena Balio Casey P Agarwal Rajender Carroll Aaron E Menachemi Nir June 2018 The Effects Of Medicaid Expansion Under The ACA A Systematic Review Health Affairs 37 6 944 950 doi 10 1377 hlthaff 2017 1491 PMID 29863941 S2CID 46937241 Levitt Larry October 14 2021 The Inequity of the Medicaid Coverage Gap and Why It Is Hard to Fix It JAMA Health Forum 2 10 e213905 doi 10 1001 jamahealthforum 2021 3905 PMID 36218895 S2CID 244618197 Wen Hefei Druss Benjamin G Cummings Janet R December 2015 Effect of Medicaid Expansions on Health Insurance Coverage and Access to Care among Low Income Adults with Behavioral Health Conditions Health Services Research 50 6 1787 1809 doi 10 1111 1475 6773 12411 PMC 4693853 PMID 26551430 Gee Emily R February 11 2014 Eligible Uninsured Latinos 8 in 10 Could Receive Health Insurance Marketplace Tax Credits Medicaid or CHIP PDF Report Department of Health and Human Services Retrieved May 24 2023 Medicaid expansion Glossary Healthinsurance org January 23 2023 Retrieved May 24 2023 a b Olson Laura Katz July 3 2015 The Affordable Care Act and the Politics of the Medicaid Expansion New Political Science 37 3 295 320 doi 10 1080 07393148 2015 1056428 S2CID 153652077 Petersen Chris L April 7 2010 Medicaid The Federal Medical Assistance Percentage FMAP PDF Congressional Research Service Retrieved May 24 2023 via EveryCRSReport Lyon Sarah M Douglas Ivor S Cooke Colin R May 2014 Medicaid Expansion under the Affordable Care Act Implications for Insurance related Disparities in Pulmonary Critical Care and Sleep Annals of the American Thoracic Society 11 4 661 667 doi 10 1513 AnnalsATS 201402 072PS PMC 4225799 PMID 24708065 The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act Act No 111 143 of March 23 2010 PDF 111th United States Congress pp 119 1024 a b c d e Crowley Ryan A Golden William March 18 2014 Health policy basics Medicaid expansion Annals of Internal Medicine 160 6 423 5 doi 10 7326 M13 2626 PMID 24366475 S2CID 37194152 Andrews Christina M Grogan Colleen M Smith Bikki Tran Abraham Amanda J Pollack Harold A Humphreys Keith Westlake Melissa A Friedmann Peter D August 2018 Medicaid Benefits For Addiction Treatment Expanded After Implementation Of The Affordable Care Act Health Affairs 37 8 1216 1222 doi 10 1377 hlthaff 2018 0272 PMC 6501794 PMID 30080460 States Getting a Jump Start on Health Reform s Medicaid Expansion KFF April 2 2012 Retrieved May 25 2023 a b c d Pear Robert March 24 2012 Implications Are Far Reaching in States Challenge of Federal Health Care Law New York Times Retrieved May 25 2023 a b c National Federation of Independent Business v Sebelius Oyez Retrieved May 25 2023 Rosenbaum Sara Wilensky Gail March 2020 Closing The Medicaid Coverage Gap Options For Reform A review of options that could make health insurance more affordable for 2 5 million poor working age adults who live in states that have not expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act Health Affairs 39 3 514 518 doi 10 1377 hlthaff 2019 01463 PMID 32119611 S2CID 211835394 Garfield Rachel Damico Anthony October 2017 The Coverage Gap Uninsured Poor Adults in States that Do Not Expand Medicaid PDF Report KFF Retrieved May 25 2023 Russell Kevin June 28 2012 Court holds that states have choice whether to join medicaid expansion SCOTUSblog Retrieved May 25 2023 Escarce Jose J Wozniak Gregory D Tsipas Stavros Pane Joseph D Ma Yanlei Brotherton Sarah E Yu Hao May 2022 The Affordable Care Act Medicaid Expansion Social Disadvantage and the Practice Location Choices of New General Internists Medical Care 60 5 342 350 doi 10 1097 MLR 0000000000001703 PMC 8989636 PMID 35250020 Lanford Daniel Quadagno Jill September 2016 Implementing ObamaCare The Politics of Medicaid Expansion under the Affordable Care Act of 2010 Sociological Perspectives 59 3 619 639 doi 10 1177 0731121415587605 S2CID 148121624 Neukam Stephen March 23 2023 These 10 states have not expanded Medicaid The Hill Nexstar Media Retrieved May 25 2023 Musumeci MaryBeth March 18 2021 Medicaid Provisions in the American Rescue Plan Act KFF Retrieved May 26 2023 Rosenbaum Sara Handley Morgan Casoni Maria Morris Rebecca March 23 2021 Medicaid And The American Rescue Plan How It All Fits Together Health Affairs Blog HealthAffairs doi 10 1377 forefront 20210322 860778 Retrieved May 26 2023 Mistler Steve November 17 2012 LePage defies key parts of Obamacare Portland Press Herald Portland Maine pp A1 A7 Retrieved June 6 2023 via Newspapers com a b c d Murphy Edward D Lawlor Joe November 8 2017 November 7 2017 Maine becomes first state to approve Medicaid expansion by popular vote Portland Press Herald Portland Maine Retrieved June 6 2023 a b c Wight Patty November 8 2017 After Maine Voters Approve Medicaid Expansion Governor Raises Objections NPR Retrieved June 6 2023 a b c Whittle Patrick November 7 2017 Maine OKs Medicaid expansion in first of its kind referendum Boston com Boston Globe Media Partners Associated Press Retrieved June 6 2023 Lawlor Joe October 13 2016 Group prepared to seek referendum in fight to expand Medicaid Portland Press Herald Portland Maine pp A1 A5 Retrieved June 6 2023 via Newspapers com Lawlor Joe October 14 2016 Group will seek signers for Medicaid petitions Portland Press Herald Portland Maine p B1 B5 Retrieved June 6 2023 Murphy Edward D December 15 2016 Enough signatures gathered to put Medicaid expansion on Maine ballot Portland Press Herald Portland Maine Retrieved June 6 2023 Miller Kevin September 8 2017 Medicaid casino ballot wording changes Morning Sentinel Waterville Maine pp B1 B2 Retrieved June 6 2023 via Newspapers com a b c Santhanam Laura November 9 2017 Why Maine voted to expand Medicaid and what s next PBS Retrieved June 6 2023 a b Villenuve Marina July 9 2018 LePage wins latest swipe against Medicaid expansion Associated Press Retrieved June 6 2023 Miller Kevin July 13 2018 July 12 2018 LePage says he ll go to jail before he lets Maine expand Medicaid without funding Portland Press Herald Portland Maine Retrieved June 6 2023 Goodnough Abby July 24 2018 A Vote Expanded Medicaid in Maine The Governor Is Ignoring It New York Times Retrieved June 6 2023 Gray Megan August 23 2018 Maine high court rejects LePage request to delay Medicaid expansion Portland Press Herald Portland Maine Lawlor Joe September 4 2018 LePage files court ordered plan to expand Medicaid in Maine and asks feds to reject it Portland Press Herald Portland Maine Retrieved June 6 2023 Lawlor Joe September 22 2018 Another legal move underway to block LePage s medicaid efforts Sun Journal Lewiston Maine p A2 Retrieved June 6 2023 via Newspapers com Miller Kevin November 8 2018 Mills talks priorities Sun Journal Lewiston Maine p A5 Retrieved June 6 2023 via Newspapers com Lawlor Joe November 8 2018 Mills to start Medicaid expansion Sun Journal Lewiston Maine p A5 Retrieved June 6 2023 via Newspapers com Lawlor Joe November 28 2018 LePage seeks another delay to Medicaid Kennebec Journal Kennebec Maine p B7 Retrieved June 6 2023 via Newspapers com Lawlor Joe December 7 2018 Maine can wait to expand after LePage leaves Sun Journal Lewiston Maine Retrieved June 6 2023 via Newspapers com Lawlor Joe January 4 2019 Mills Signs Order to Expand Medicaid Portland Press Herald Portland Maine pp A1 A7 Retrieved June 6 2023 via Newspapers com Cooper Michael July 14 2012 Many Governors Are Still Unsure About Medicaid Expansion New York Times Retrieved May 27 2023 Greene Wayne July 25 2012 Fallin says Medicaid decision is unlikely before fall election The Oklahoman Oklahoma City Oklahoma p 16A Retrieved May 26 2023 via Newspapers com Green Wayne August 8 2012 Health exchange likely dead in state The Oklahoma Oklahoma City Oklahoma p 8A Retrieved May 27 2023 via Newspapers com Casteel Chris October 23 2012 Coburn warns against Medicaid expansion The Oklahoman p 7A Retrieved May 27 2023 via Newspapers com Rolland Megan November 20 2012 Governor says state won t develop health care exchange The Oklahoman Oklahoma City Oklahoma pp 1A 4A Retrieved May 27 2023 via Newspapers com Cosgrove Jaclyn November 20 2012 Medicaid decision draws mixed reaction The Oklahoman Oklahoma City Oklahoma pp 1A 4A Retrieved May 27 2023 via Newspapers com Hoberock Barbara April 1 2016 Shoring up health system Tulsa World Tulsa Oklahoma pp A1 A6 Retrieved May 26 2023 via Newspapers com a b c d Brown Trevor January 16 2022 June 28 2021 The Long Winding Road to Medicaid Expansion in Oklahoma Oklahoma Watch Retrieved May 27 2023 Krehbiel Randy Hoberock Barbara April 24 2016 Medicaid rebalancing draws questions The Oklahoman Oklahoma City Oklahoma p 5A Retrieved May 27 2023 a b Cosgrove Jaclyn Green Rick August 30 2016 State Medicaid director announces resignation Tulsa World Tulsa Oklahoma p A11 Retrieved May 27 2023 via Newspapers com Murphy Sean May 30 2016 Oklahoma Legislature closes 1 3B budget gap Tulsa World Tulsa Oklahoma pp A1 A6 Retrieved May 27 2023 via Newspapers com Felder Ben December 16 2018 Dems will push Medicaid expansion The Oklahoman Oklahoma City Oklahoma pp A1 A2 Retrieved May 30 2023 via Newspapers com Rowley D Sean May 17 2019 Stitt not supportive of Medicaid expansion in Oklahoma Cherokee Phoenix Tahlequah Oklahoma Retrieved May 30 2023 a b c d Putnam Carly September 21 2022 July 19 2019 SQ 802 Medicaid Expansion Information and resources OKPolicy org Tulsa Oklahoma Oklahoma Policy Institute Retrieved May 30 2023 Halter Caroline June 18 2019 Oklahoma Supreme Court Says Medicaid Expansion Campaign Can Proceed KGOU Retrieved June 18 2019 Medicaid expansion supporters organizing Oklahoma volunteers Associated Press July 24 2019 Retrieved May 30 2023 a b Forman Carmen October 25 2019 Medicaid expansion campaign turns in 313 000 signatures breaks record The Oklahoman Oklahoma City Oklahoma Retrieved May 30 2023 Brown Trevor August 30 2019 Key facts about Medicaid Expansion proposal Sequoyah County Times Vol 125 no 24 Sallisaw Oklahoma pp A1 A3 Retrieved May 30 2019 via Newspapers com Trotter Matt March 18 2020 Stitt s SoonerCare 2 0 Plan Released for Public Comment Public Radio Tulsa Tulsa Oklahoma Retrieved May 30 2023 Forman Carmen January 31 2020 Gov Kevin Stitt looks to implement Trump supported Medicaid expansion in Oklahoma The Oklahoman Oklahoma City Oklahoma Retrieved May 30 2023 Brown Trevor August 17 2020 February 14 2020 Exclusive Stitt s Plan Would Implement Full Medicaid Expansion as Early as July Oklahoma Watch Retrieved May 30 2023 Forman Carmen June 28 2020 Medicaid expansion on ballot The Oklahoman Oklahoma City Oklahoma pp A1 A2 Retrieved May 30 2023 via Newspapers com Fortier Jackie July 1 2020 Oklahoma Votes For Medicaid Expansion Over Objections Of Republican State Leaders NPR Retrieved May 30 2023 a b c Bush Daniel March 16 2021 Support for Medicaid expansion grows in South Dakota one of the last red state holdouts PBS NewsHour Productions Retrieved May 25 2023 a b c d Santhanam Laura November 15 2022 South Dakota passed Medicaid expansion What s next PBS Retrieved May 26 2023 Messerly Megan November 9 2022 South Dakota votes to expand Medicaid Politico Retrieved May 26 2023 Walker Jon October 26 2014 October 25 2014 Poll More S D voters back Medicaid expansion Argus Leader Sioux Falls South Dakota Retrieved May 25 2023 Raman Sandhya May 25 2021 Medicaid expansion fight resurfaces in states Roll CAll Retrieved May 25 2023 a b Crampton Liz July 21 2021 The next Republican target Ballot campaigns Politico Retrieved May 25 2023 Groves Stephen March 2 2021 Senate wants 60 voter threshold for some ballot initiatives Associated Press Retrieved May 26 2023 Sneve Joe June 21 2021 Top South Dakota lawmakers organize to support three fifths rule on financial ballot initiatives Argus Leader Sioux Falls South Dakota Retrieved May 26 2023 Stolberg Sheryl Gay November 3 2022 Voters Have Expanded Medicaid in 6 States Is South Dakota Next New York Times Retrieved May 25 2023 Ellis Jonathan Sneve Joe May 6 2021 Medicaid expansion group loses SD Supreme Court bid Argus Leader Sioux Falls South Dakota Retrieved May 26 2023 Zionts Arielle January 3 2022 South Dakota Medicaid expansion will be on November 2022 ballot South Dakota Public Broadcasting Retrieved May 26 2023 Sneve Joe January 6 2022 Senator seeks to withdraw ballot measure in exchange for Legislative action on Medicaid expansion Argus Leader Sioux Falls South Dakota Retrieved May 26 2023 SD Senate rejects Medicaid expansion leaving it to election AssociatedPress February 15 2022 Retrieved May 25 2023 Ellis Jonathan June 7 2022 Voters not interested in making it harder to raise taxes reject Amendment C Argus Leader Sioux Falls South Dakota Retrieved May 26 2023 a b Huber Makenzie November 9 2022 State prepares to implement Medicaid expansion next summer expects significant hiring South Dakota Searchlight Retrieved May 26 2023 a b Dobner Jennifer May 23 2013 Analysis Medicaid expansion would save Utah millions cover 123K uninsured The Salt Lake Tribune Salt Lake City Utah Retrieved June 22 2023 Dobner Jennifer June 8 2013 Utah mom I would have died without PCN state s low income health coverage The Salt Lake Tribune Salt Lake City Utah Retrieved June 22 2023 McCombs Brady March 2 2013 Herbert still mulling over a Medicaid expansion The Spectrum Saint George Utah p A2 Retrieved June 22 2023 via Newspapers com Price Michelle L March 11 2013 Utah lawmakers counter Medicaid expansion The Spectrum Saint George Utah Associated Press pp A1 A3 Retrieved June 22 2023 Utah House votes to bar Medicaid expansion The Daily Spectrum Saint George Utah Associated Press March 13 2013 p A2 Retrieved June 22 2023 via Newspapers com Wood Benjamin January 1 2020 Full Medicaid expansion begins in Utah Here s how to check if you qualify The Salt Lake Tribune Salt Lake City Utah Retrieved June 22 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Medicaid coverage gap amp oldid 1211569620, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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