Trump, Medicaid and Tax cut
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In states that choose to end expanded Medicaid eligibility, fewer covered beneficiaries mean hospitals will see less revenue and lower operating margins.
A new report is shedding more light on the states where proposed Medicaid cuts making their way through Congress will impact Americans the hardest.
This is a significant shift from prior proposals, as they rally around President Donald Trump's expansive budget package.
The winds of change are sweeping across the Medicaid landscape — and for those of us working in skilled nursing facilities, standing still is no longer an
A House-passed reconciliation bill would reduce federal funding to states that provide state-funded health insurance to people in the U.S. illegally, resulting in 1.4 million people losing coverage, according to a preliminary Congressional Budget Office analysis.
2don MSN
The U.S. House has passed a sweeping budget bill that would cut Medicaid by hundreds of billions of dollars and throw millions of Americans off plans.
Following the passage of Trump's "big, beautiful bill" in the House, several Delaware lawmakers spoke out against potential adjustments to Medicaid.
About 200,000 Washingtonians could lose health care coverage if the U.S. Senate approves the cuts, and hospitals, clinics and nursing homes would lose key funding.