One-Fourth of People Dropped From Medicaid Still Aren’t Insured, Survey Shows

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    FILE - Children's Defense Fund Program Director Graciela Camarena assists Lucia Salazar with filling out Medicaid and SNAP application forms for her family in Pharr, Texas, Nov. 13, 2023. Almost a quarter of people who were dropped from Medicaid during the post-pandemic eligibility reviews are still uninsured and high costs are preventing them from getting on another plan, a new survey showed Friday, April 12, 2024. (AP Photo/Michael Gonzalez, File)

    (AP) – Almost a quarter of people who were dropped from Medicaid during the post-pandemic eligibility reviews are still uninsured and high costs are preventing them from getting on another plan, a new survey showed Friday.

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    At least 20 million lower-income Americans have lost their federal health insurance since the provision that kept states from disenrolling people during COVID-19 ended in March 2023, according to KFF’s unwinding tracker. That’s more than the Biden administration’s initial projection of 15 million people.

    States have through at least June — some longer — to finish eligibility reviews, so experts say the number is likely to grow. Medicaid enrollment nationally rose by nearly one-third during the pandemic, from 71 million people in February 2020 to 94 million in April 2023.

    The number of disenrollments and people without health insurance could be much higher, said Joan Alker, executive director and co-founder of Georgetown University’s Center for Children and Families. That’s because the survey doesn’t take into account children, who have been one of the biggest groups affected by unwinding.

    “The question is, ‘How long are they going to stay uninsured?’” she said. “The states who want to cover their citizens are going to have to do a lot of work to get them back.”

    Half of people who were enrolled in Medicaid prior to unwinding said they heard little or nothing at all about the process, according to the KFF survey, which includes responses from 1,227 adults who were previously covered by Medicaid.

    Fifty-six percent of the people who were dropped said in the survey that they put off needed medical care while trying to renew.

    And health care costs of any kind can be a major burden for low-income Americans, said Sara Rosenbaum of George Washington University’s School of Public Health and Health Services.

    “Suddenly, a visit that didn’t cost you anything (before) – let’s say it’s going to cost you $5. That $5 can be $500 for some folks,” she said.

    The majority of survey respondents also said they had problems when trying to renew their Medicaid coverage, like long wait times on the phone and issues with their paperwork. It’s in line with concerns that advocates and officials had about the large number of procedural disenrollments – when people were dropped due to errors in paperwork or failing to return the forms.

    In the 10 states that haven’t yet expanded Medicaid, people were more likely to be required to provide proof of residency to renew their coverage, the KFF survey showed, with Black and Hispanic people overall more likely to be asked for proof.

    That makes an already-complicated process even more arduous.

    “We have known for decades that the more burdensome you make the application and renewal process,” Rosenbaum said, “the greater likelihood that completely eligible people will not get the coverage they’re entitled to get.”

    More than 30 million people are still awaiting Medicaid renewals, while 43.6 million have had their coverage renewed, according to KFF.


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    4 Comments
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    Moderate Munch
    Moderate Munch
    15 days ago

    Unpopular opinion: insurance is the problem. The free market works when everything is simple and purchasing prices are direct. This allows competition to keep prices low. Enter “insurance” and people are no longer making purchasing decisions directly, leading to cronyism and higher prices.

    R. Moshe
    R. Moshe
    17 days ago

    If these people are really without means they would qualify for Medicaid to continue. Either they are not poor or they are too lazy to cooperate.
    I work in a slum neighborhood and I often see boxes of large flat TVs that were purchased, I hear complaints of cable bills in the hundreds yet I pay for their health costs.

    R Kook ZL Was a BIG TZADIK
    R Kook ZL Was a BIG TZADIK
    17 days ago

    Here is a a few ideas;
    1) Charge a deducible for Medicad. You’ll see costs will go down.
    2) Require a work on wellness plan. You want medciad you need to work on losing weight and or excersing otherwise you pay an extra $1K
    3)Charge an extra 1K if you smoke or take drugs.
    All of these ideas are things my work does. If you do this medicad costs go down and you can enroll more.

    R Kook ZL Was a BIG TZADIK
    R Kook ZL Was a BIG TZADIK
    17 days ago

    If they are so low income why did they fall off Medicaid? what should we do about this even if true? Who should pay for their mediciad? I defintley encourage people to donate charity to RCCS or any fund that helps people purchase insurance. But how do you want to pay for it in a non charity manner?