Case: Medicaid, Non-Discrimination, Public Health
By: Charly Gilfoil
CMS must collect information on Medicaid and CHIP enrollees’ race and ethnicity to understand program quality and monitor equitable access. Yet, CMS has not formally required state Medicaid programs to collect or report race and ethnicity information in a uniform manner. As a result, data on racial and ethnic health disparities in these programs lacks completeness, reliability, and consistency. This brief outlines CMS’s current authority to engage in race and ethnicity data collection and provides several actions that CMS can take right now to improve demographic data collection.
Case: Medicaid, Non-Discrimination, Public Health
Work requirements are one of the most insidious strategies to cut Medicaid because they do so by triggering coverage…
Medicaid, the United States’ largest public health insurance program, currently insures over 72 million people with low incomes. Medicaid…
Federal Medicaid funds finance a little under 1/5 of states’ total spending. Because Medicaid is the largest source of…