It’s the first anniversary of the Medicaid unwinding for many states, a process that kicked off when federal rules that had kept people on Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) through the pandemic expired. And while states could redetermine eligibility again, things have “unwound” more than some experts predicted. Children were kicked off the rolls at higher rates than adults, according to a new study the Urban Institute released May 2. Twelve states—Montana, Iowa, South Dakota, Alabama, Idaho, Georgia, Texas, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Florida, Mississippi, Colorado—exceeded 100% of their total projections for disenrolling children.
Eight states—South Dakota, New Hampshire, Texas, Arkansas, Iowa, Idaho, Montana, and Oklahoma—also exceeded 100% of their total projections for disenrolling both adults and children.
Experts following the process expected to see some states with more disenrollments, but they didn’t realize so many of those losing coverage would be children, Katherine Hempstead, a senior policy advisor at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, said.
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