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- May 23, 2022
The Ongoing Racial Paradox of the Medicaid Program
Read moreThis article originally appeared in the May edition of the Journal of Health and Life Sciences Law, published by the American Health Law Association Medicaid, the largest public health insurance program for low-income people, has since 1965 extended health coverage to millions of people, including people of color. At…
- April 6, 2022
Q&A: Recent EPSDT Cases
Read moreThe Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnostic and Treatment provisions are among the most specific in the Medicaid Act. This Fact Sheet summarizes three recent court cases that analyze what states must do to comply with EPSDT and discusses an opinion certifying an EPSDT case as class action.
- February 25, 2022
Fact Sheet: Private Enforcement of the Medicaid Act Under 42 U.S.C. § 1983
Read moreThis Fact Sheet provides an overview of the history of private enforcement of the Medicaid Act pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. It then describes the current state of enforcement and explains why developments must be monitored closely in 2022.
- December 16, 2021
NHeLP Comments on HHS SUNSET Repeal Rule
Read moreIn the HHS SUNSET final rule, HHS sought to retroactively impose a mandatory expiration date on an estimated 18,000 duly promulgated regulations. Even long-standing rules would be automatically rescinded unless they survive a complex process of assessment and review. If implemented, programs like Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance…
- December 8, 2021
NHeLP Comments on the No Surprises Act Interim Final Rule, Part 2
Read moreIn December 2020, Congress passed the No Surprises Act; a federal effort to protect people from surprise medical bills. Medical debt is a growing issue across the U.S., especially for the uninsured and underinsured. Starting January 1, 2022, these new rules take effect and will ban surprise bills for…
- September 15, 2021
Comments on NIST Proposal for Identifying & Managing Bias in AI
Read moreAs awareness grows of the biases baked into artificial intelligence and other automated decision making, and the real world impacts of these systems on people, federal agencies like the National Institute of Standards and Technology are developing risk management frameworks for these systems. NHeLP submitted comments on NIST's recent…