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Quantitative Analysis Reports

Medicaid Expansion Would Lighten Spending Burden

Medicaid Expansion Would Lighten Spending Burden

A state-by-state analysis shows where Medicaid expansion could have the most impact on reducing the financial burden of medical costs.

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Urban Institute Real Time Policy Analysis

No Vet Left Behind

No Vet Left Behind

As many as 40 percent of the nation's 1.3 million uninsured veterans could qualify for Medicaid under provisions of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), a new analysis suggests. Whether veterans receive these benefits depends on which states opt to expand Medicaid.

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State Network Resources

Medicaid Expansion: Who Won't Be Eligible?

Medicaid Expansion: Who Won't Be Eligible?

Despite the far-reaching Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), large numbers of low-income uninsured adults won't be eligible because of their immigration status. This brief provides the first state-specific estimates of the number of uninsured low-income adults who fall into that category.

Read the issue brief

Survey

Support for State Insurance Exchanges Spans Party Lines

Support for State Insurance Exchanges Spans Party Lines

Fifty-five percent of the public say establishing the exchanges is a “top priority,” according to a survey released by RWJF, the Kaiser Family Foundation, and the Harvard School of Public Health.

Read the poll findings

Urban Institute Real Time Policy Analysis

More to Gain, Less to Lose

More to Gain, Less to Lose

Under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) implementation, hospitals will likely gain $2.59 in new revenue from Medicaid participants for every dollar lost from private health insurance revenue.

Read why analysts think hospitals will benefit

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  • Topic: Medicaid
  • Georgia (GA) SA
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  • Poor and economically disadvantaged (5)
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What You Don't Know Can Hurt You

August 1, 2001 | Program Result

From 1997 to 1999, staff at the Southern Institute on Children and Families (SICF) conducted a project designed to improve awareness among low-income families about benefits for which they are eligible, including Medicaid and child care.

Supporting Families After Welfare Reform: Access to Medicaid, SCHIP and Food Stamps

National Program

Program to help states and large counties solve problems in eligibility processes that make it difficult for low-income families to access and retain Medicaid, the State Children's Health Insurance Program, or Food Stamps.

Supporting Families After Welfare Reform: Access to Medicaid, CHIP and Food Stamps

February 5, 2007 | Program Result

RWJF designed Supporting Families After Welfare Reform: Access to Medicaid, SCHIP and Food Stamps to remove administrative obstacles that prevent low-income families from securing health and Food Stamp benefits.

Healthy Kids Replication Program

October 1, 2002 | Program Result

The Healthy Kids Replication Program was a national program to help states develop a comprehensive children's health insurance product that was to be sold through the schools.

It Takes a Community to Solve a Health Problem

January 1, 2003 | Program Result

From 1993 to 2001, George Washington University Medical Center, Washington, developed and implemented Community Health in Focus, a program designed to use the convening role of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) to stimulate action on health care issues identified by local communities.

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