When respondents to a new Kaiser Family Foundation poll were asked about the future of Medicaid, the overwhelming majority (62 percent) supported continuing it as it is today, including its financing structure. Only 32 percent favored limiting federal Medicaid funding by converting it into a block grant (see chart).
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
July 23, 2015
The GOP's war on health (Medicaid division)
Center on Budget & Policy Priorities - As Medicaid turns 50, its critics will likely continue to call for fundamentally restructuring the program, by capping federal Medicaid funding through a block grant or establishing a per capita cap.
But these kinds of changes are unpopular and unjustified -- and
harmful, as they would shift significant costs to states, low-income
beneficiaries, and health care providers and leave millions of people
uninsured and underinsured, as we've warned.
When respondents to a new Kaiser Family Foundation poll were asked about the future of Medicaid, the overwhelming majority (62 percent) supported continuing it as it is today, including its financing structure. Only 32 percent favored limiting federal Medicaid funding by converting it into a block grant (see chart).
Medicaid spending trends don't warrant such radical changes. Medicaid is already efficient, as our recent analysis
points out. Its costs per beneficiary are substantially lower than for
private insurance (after adjusting for differences in health status).
Over the past decade, Medicaid has grown slower than per-beneficiary
costs under private employer coverage and is expected to grow no faster
through 2023 than for people with private insurance. In fact, the
Congressional Budget Office now projects that Medicaid spending between
2011 and 2020 will be $335 billion -- or 10 percent -- lower than it
projected in August 2010, largely due to slower expected growth in
per-beneficiary costs.
When respondents to a new Kaiser Family Foundation poll were asked about the future of Medicaid, the overwhelming majority (62 percent) supported continuing it as it is today, including its financing structure. Only 32 percent favored limiting federal Medicaid funding by converting it into a block grant (see chart).
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