Medicaid began as a poverty program for the poorest of the worthy poor. In the next five decades, it extended its reach to cover a broad population for some of its services, including, for example, about half of all childbirths in the United States, and almost half of all long-term care services. The Affordable Care Act (ACA) pushed Medicaid\u27s breadth further, although that extension was at least delayed in many states by the Supreme Court
If single-payer health care is ever to become a reality in the United States, it will very likely be...
The 2010s have been a momentous decade for Medicaid. With enrollment of over seventy-two million peo...
Medicaid fosters constant tension between the federal government and the states, and that friction h...
Medicaid began as a poverty program for the poorest of the worthy poor. In the next five decades, ...
Medicaid has financed care for the poor for five decades. During that time it has balanced two impo...
Medicaid was intended from its inception to provide financial access to health care for certain cate...
Medicaid was intended from its inception to provide financial access to health care for certain cate...
Should government protect mission-driven providers in the shift to Medicaid managed care? In part, t...
This paper is a contribution to the symposium entitled Scalpel to Gavel: Exploring the Modern State ...
This essay, written for the Yale Law School symposium on The Law of Medicare and Medicaid at 50, exp...
Professor David Orentlicher considers the significance of the passage of the Affordable Care Act on ...
At the time it was enacted in 2010, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) was widely ...
The soul of Medicaid is and always has been to achieve justice in health care. Medicaid at its incep...
Throughout its first forty-eight years of life, the federal Medicaid statute lacked a viable insuran...
For the first fifty years of its existence, Medicaid suffered from a serious defect-while it was ado...
If single-payer health care is ever to become a reality in the United States, it will very likely be...
The 2010s have been a momentous decade for Medicaid. With enrollment of over seventy-two million peo...
Medicaid fosters constant tension between the federal government and the states, and that friction h...
Medicaid began as a poverty program for the poorest of the worthy poor. In the next five decades, ...
Medicaid has financed care for the poor for five decades. During that time it has balanced two impo...
Medicaid was intended from its inception to provide financial access to health care for certain cate...
Medicaid was intended from its inception to provide financial access to health care for certain cate...
Should government protect mission-driven providers in the shift to Medicaid managed care? In part, t...
This paper is a contribution to the symposium entitled Scalpel to Gavel: Exploring the Modern State ...
This essay, written for the Yale Law School symposium on The Law of Medicare and Medicaid at 50, exp...
Professor David Orentlicher considers the significance of the passage of the Affordable Care Act on ...
At the time it was enacted in 2010, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) was widely ...
The soul of Medicaid is and always has been to achieve justice in health care. Medicaid at its incep...
Throughout its first forty-eight years of life, the federal Medicaid statute lacked a viable insuran...
For the first fifty years of its existence, Medicaid suffered from a serious defect-while it was ado...
If single-payer health care is ever to become a reality in the United States, it will very likely be...
The 2010s have been a momentous decade for Medicaid. With enrollment of over seventy-two million peo...
Medicaid fosters constant tension between the federal government and the states, and that friction h...