Am I the only one who has trouble with calling people who depend on Medicaid “able body?” And how was it possible that the proposed 6 million people who will be kicked off Medicaid should never been given health care in the first place when Republicans controlled the House for over two years under Biden? What were they doing? Oh yes, looking for dirt on his son Hunter.
Am I the only one who has trouble with calling people who depend on Medicaid “able body?” And how was it possible that the proposed 6 million people who will be kicked off Medicaid should never been given health care in the first place when Republicans controlled the House for over two years under Biden? What were they doing? Oh yes, looking for dirt on his son Hunter.
Medicaid expansion under the ACA gave Medicaid eligibility to a larger pool of non-disabled, working-age people who, for whatever reason, are just too poor to get care under commercial insurance. Even though subsidized ACA plans have $0 premiums for some people, they still have deductibles, co-pays, and co-insurance, whereas Medicaid mostly doesn't.
But the vast majority of adults without disabilities who are on Medicaid are either above retirement age, employed (just still poor), in school, or the unpaid caregiver of someone who is disabled, elderly, or a child.
Am I the only one who has trouble with calling people who depend on Medicaid “able body?” And how was it possible that the proposed 6 million people who will be kicked off Medicaid should never been given health care in the first place when Republicans controlled the House for over two years under Biden? What were they doing? Oh yes, looking for dirt on his son Hunter.
Medicaid expansion under the ACA gave Medicaid eligibility to a larger pool of non-disabled, working-age people who, for whatever reason, are just too poor to get care under commercial insurance. Even though subsidized ACA plans have $0 premiums for some people, they still have deductibles, co-pays, and co-insurance, whereas Medicaid mostly doesn't.
But the vast majority of adults without disabilities who are on Medicaid are either above retirement age, employed (just still poor), in school, or the unpaid caregiver of someone who is disabled, elderly, or a child.