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University of Wisconsin–Madison
Poverty-related issues in the news, from the Institute for Research on Poverty

State Medicaid Programs – Nebraska, Kentucky

  • Advocates for low income, disabled fear new Medicaid rules, By Nancy Hicks, June 13, 2010, Lincoln Journal Star: “Advocates for low-income people and those with disabilities fear the two companies that will provide health services to about 90,000 Nebraskans will focus on the bottom line, not the health needs of clients. The advocates testified at a public hearing last week on new rules that will apply to the Medicaid program for most people in 10 eastern Nebraska counties. The state has contracted with Coventry and UnitedHealthcare (its Share Advantage Plan), under what are called at-risk or full-risk managed care plans. The two companies will be paid a set amount per client, based on the age and needs of the client. The private company takes the risk and covers the cost if services for its clients cost more than the state’s payment…”
  • Medicaid stop-smoking program gets $1.5 million in budget, By Deborah Yetter, June 12, 2010, Louisville Courier-Journal: “Health advocates say Kentucky’s bleak budget has one bright spot — it funds a long-sought program to help people on Medicaid stop smoking. Lawmakers allocated $1.5 million a year for the next two fiscal years that, combined with additional federal matching money, will give Medicaid officials about $11 million for the program. ‘We’re thrilled it finally got the funding,’ said Amy Barkley of the Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids, one of several groups that had lobbied the legislature to fund the program. ‘Everybody agreed it was kind of a no-brainer. People can quit smoking if they are given the appropriate tools.’ Lawmakers authorized the project in 2007 but never funded it because of the tight state budget. But advocates kept lobbying for funding. They argued that the state’s increasingly costly Medicaid program, which provides health care for nearly 800,000 low-income and disabled Kentuckians, could save money it now spends to treat smoking-related diseases…”