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    what is medicaid expansion in georgia
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  2. Feb 14, 2023 · The program, called “Pathways to Coverage,” will go live in July. Some of Georgia’s 1.2 million uninsured adults will be eligible for Medicaid, but only if, like the patients at the Volunteer Clinic, they work.

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  4. Jan 12, 2024 · Full Medicaid expansion would increase eligibility to those under 138% of the federal poverty level, without other eligibility requirements. RELATED: Georgia’s Medicaid expansion will cover more low-income adults.

    • Key Takeaways
    • Many Georgians Cannot Afford Health Care
    • Georgians Need Health Coverage to Stay Healthy
    • Stabilize Struggling Rural Hospitals by Closing The Coverage Gap
    • Strengthen Mental Health, Substance Use Treatment by Expanding Health Coverage
    • Georgia Can Afford to Close The Coverage Gap
    • Expand Health Coverage Immediately
    • Georgia Can Expand Medicaid in A Few Different Ways
    The COVID-19 pandemic is disproportionately affecting Black Georgians, who are more likely to contract and pass away from the virus and work in jobs facing layoffs and furloughs, and will likely pu...
    Immediate Medicaid expansion would save lives, provide desperately needed coverage to Georgia’s most vulnerable, accelerate economic recovery and stabilize rural health systems.
    About 255,000 Georgiansmake too little to get financial help to buy health insurance on the Healthcare.gov marketplace and do not currently qualify for Medicaid. These Georgians have incomes below...
    Another 219,000 uninsured Georgians make slightly above the poverty line (between 100 and 138 percent of poverty). Most will qualify for premium subsidies on healthcare.gov, but they may not be abl...
    1.4 million Georgians do not have health insurance, and Georgia’s uninsured rate of 13.7 percent is third highest in the country. In rural Georgia, the uninsured rate could climb to more than 25 pe...
    Substance abuse, unmet mental health needs and chronic diseases are decimating communities statewide, exacerbated by high uninsured rates that prevent Georgians from getting care because they canno...
    Georgians who could gain coverage under Medicaid expansion earn below 138 percent of the federal poverty level, or about $17,600 for an individual, $23,790 for a family of two and $29,970 for a fam...
    Sixty percent of people who would be covered by Medicaid expansion are working but often not offered health benefits through their job or do not get paid enough to afford their employer plan. Only...
    Closing Georgia’s coverage gap would extend health insurance to over 155,000 uninsured women. Georgia ranks among the bottom five states for women’s health insurance coverage.
    Closing the coverage gap could extend health insurance to nearly half of Georgia’s uninsured veterans, expanding coverage to 32,000 uninsured veterans and military spouses in our state.
    Seven rural hospitals have shuttered since 2013 across the state, and more than half of Georgia’s remaining rural hospitals are financially vulnerable to closure. At least 118 countiesin Georgia ar...
    Many Georgia hospitals are struggling because they treat so many patients who lack health insurance and cannot afford high out-of-pocket costs. Closing the coverage gap opens up an important revenu...
    Taxpayers end up paying a share of the cost for uninsured people who show up in emergency rooms. Closing the coverage gap would allow people to go to their doctor instead of the emergency room when...
    Other states see significant reductions in uncompensated care after closing their coverage gaps: Arkansas experienced a 56.4 percent decrease; Kentucky saw a 59.7 percent decrease.
    Closing the coverage gap can significantly strengthen behavioral health treatment and services in Georgia. About 25 percentof uninsured Georgians who would qualify for Medicaid expansion coverage s...
    States that closed their coverage gap expanded treatment services to more people with mental illness or substance use disorders. Kentucky saw a 700 percentincrease in Medicaid beneficiaries using s...
    Georgia can afford to close the coverage gap, but state leaders have so far chosen to spend tax dollars in other ways, like $309 million for insurance company tax breaks. State leaders could also i...
    Closing the coverage gap would extend health coverage to almost half a million Georgians, support struggling hospitals, create 56,000 jobs and bring in $3 billion from the federal government. The a...
    The COVID-19 pandemic is expected to result in more Georgians losing insurance and significant shortfalls in the state’s budget. To best respond to the COVID-19 pandemic, Georgia needs stronger hea...
    As of April 16, 2020, 940,000 Georgians have filed for unemployment benefits this year, and some of them are losing health insurance they received through their job. Depending on what the state’s n...
    Uninsured adults may face higher risk of exposure to COVID-19 because of the types of jobs they are more likely to hold. The occupations with the highest number of uninsured workersinclude cashiers...
    State leaders have delayed offering serious solutions for Georgia’s worsening health care crisis for years, waiting on Congress to provide a solution that hasn’t come. Rural communities and communi...
    The Georgia Department of Community Health, the state Medicaid agency, can submit a state plan amendment to the federal government. The federal government has 90 days to approve it. Most expansion...
    The state Medicaid agency can submit a request to the federal government to waive certain parts of the Medicaid program. This plan, called an 1115 Medicaid waiver, can include increasing the Medica...
    In December of 2019, Georgia submitted an 1115 waiver that partially expanded Medicaid eligibility up to 100 percent of the poverty line. The plan has not yet been approved, but it includes work re...
  5. Jun 30, 2023 · Georgia is offering a new bargain to some adults without health insurance beginning Saturday, July 1, 2023, — go to work or school and the state will cover you. But advocates decry the plan, which will insure far fewer people than a full expansion of the state-federal Medicaid program, as needlessly restrictive and expensive.

  6. Jan 4, 2024 · ATLANTA (AP) — Medicaid expansion was long politically impossible in Georgia. Now it’s just unlikely. Georgia House Speaker Jon Burns says he wants lawmakers to consider more health coverage in the state as their session begins Monday.

  7. Jul 1, 2023 · Starting this weekend, more low-income Georgians will be eligible to sign up for health insurance under a new Medicaid program that slightly eases the state’s strict coverage rules. This means adults who earn less than $14,600 a year will now clear the income threshold to apply for an insurance card through Medicaid.

  8. Mar 31, 2024 · Georgia is one of 10 states that has not used the Affordable Care Act to expand Medicaid to cover all adults earning less than 138% of the federal poverty line, or about $20,800 a year for an...

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