Plus: Families traumatized over Medicaid clawbacks; growing measles outbreak in Texas could get 'a lot worse'; cities debate how to spend opioid funds; 'unnecessary' injections at pain clinics; our best of social; the KFF Health News Minute; and more
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Friday, Feb. 21, 2025
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The Week in Brief

Can Medicaid’s Popularity
Shield It From the Budget Ax? 

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(ISTOCK / GETTY IMAGES PLUS)

Happy Friday. I’m Renuka Rayasam, a senior correspondent for KFF Health News based in Atlanta. Lately, I have been steeped in Medicaid policy, looking at how Republicans might reshape the program. In particular, my colleague Sam Whitehead and I have extensively covered how the nation’s only active Medicaid work requirement program isn’t working. You can reach me at RenukaR@kff.org.

 

By Renuka Rayasam 

 

Congressional lawmakers are facing tricky arithmetic as they hammer out a budget plan to finance President Donald Trump’s agenda. 

 

Republicans need to free up roughly $4 trillion to pay for renewing Trump’s 2017 tax cuts, which expire at the end of the year. Trump has vowed not to touch the costliest government programs, including Medicare and Social Security.

 

He’s been less clear about his plan for Medicaid. 

 

On Wednesday, he endorsed a House GOP plan that cuts at least $880 billion from, very likely, Medicaid — the federal-state health insurance program for Americans with low incomes or disabilities. 

 

As my colleague Phil Galewitz reports, changes to expand Medicaid have become entrenched in most states — and their budgets — over the past decade. Hospitals, which not only treat but also employ a lot of Americans, are reaching out to Congress with concerns. 

 

Medicaid is also popular. A January KFF poll found that about 3 in 4 Americans view the program favorably. So Republicans would have to be strategic about cuts. 

 

But first, let’s back up. What is Medicaid? My colleague Sam Whitehead and I published a useful explainer this week. 

 

Medicaid, which turns 60 this summer, was created as part of President Lyndon B. Johnson’s “Great Society” strategy to attack poverty along with Medicare, the federal health insurance program for those 65 and older. 

 

More than 79 million people receive services from Medicaid or its closely related Children’s Health Insurance Program. That’s about 20% of the country’s population. 

 

About 40% of all children are covered by Medicaid or CHIP. Medicaid also pays for 4 in 10 births and covers costs of caring for more than 60% of nursing home residents. 

 

State and federal spending on the program reached $880 billion last year.

 

Back in Washington, Phil writes that the GOP is considering a few strategies to shrink Medicaid. 

 

They could reduce how much money the federal government sends to states, leaving state leaders to decide whether and how to plug budget holes. 

 

One idea Republicans are openly talking about is imposing work requirements. Most adults enrolled in Medicaid are already working or probably would be exempt because they’re in school, are caregivers, or are disabled. 

 

But, as Sam and I report, state experiences with work requirements show they make it harder for even eligible people to get coverage. 

 

At the heart of it all are key questions about the role of government in people’s health: How big should the U.S. medical insurance safety net be? Who deserves government assistance? 

 

And, perhaps most urgently, where will those who could lose Medicaid go for coverage? 

Medicaid

Iowa Medicaid Sends $4M Bills to Two Families Grieving Deaths of Loved Ones With Disabilities
By Tony Leys
States are required to claw back health care costs from the estates of many Medicaid recipients. Some, including Iowa, are particularly aggressive in their pursuit.

 

KFF Health News' 'What the Health?': Medicaid in the Crosshairs, Maybe
President Donald Trump has said he won’t support major cuts to the Medicaid health insurance program for people with low incomes, but he has endorsed a House budget plan that calls for major cuts, leaving the program’s future in doubt. Meanwhile, thousands of workers at the Department of Health and Human Services were fired over the holiday weekend, from the National Institutes of Health, the FDA, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, with possibly more cuts to come. Alice Miranda Ollstein of Politico, Joanne Kenen of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and Politico Magazine, and Sarah Karlin-Smith of the Pink Sheet join KFF Health News’ Julie Rovner to discuss these stories and more.

 

→ Talk to us. We’d like to speak with personnel from the Department of Health and Human Services or its component agencies about what’s happening within the federal health bureaucracy. Please message us on Signal at (415) 519-8778 or get in touch here.

Public Health

Texas Measles Outbreak Nears 100 Cases, Raising Concerns About Undetected Spread

By Amy Maxmen  

Health officials expect a measles outbreak in West Texas to exceed 100 cases because of low vaccine rates and undetected infections. Vaccine misinformation and new laws may make such situations more common and harder to contain. 

 

The Covid ‘Contrarians’ Are in Power. We Still Haven’t Hashed Out Whether They Were Right.
By Arthur Allen
Jay Bhattacharya, nominated to lead the National Institutes of Health, opposed most covid mandates. Without an honest public debate about what worked and what didn’t, public health experts say, we’re even less prepared for the next pandemic.

Best of Social

zero-abortion

In an Instagram reel, contributor Sarah Varney, who covers post-Roe America, reports that government officials in nearly a dozen states with total or near-total abortion bans, claimed that zero or very few abortions occurred in 2023 — the first full year after the Supreme Court eliminated federal abortion rights. Want more? Follow KFF Health News online as we break down health care headlines and policy:

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LinkedIn
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TikTok

Payback: Tracking the Opioid Settlement Cash

An Ice Rink To Fight Opioid Crisis: Drug-Free Fun vs. Misuse of Settlement Cash
By Aneri Pattani
A decision about how to spend settlement funds in Carter County, Kentucky, which was hit hard by the opioid epidemic, offers a window into the choices that surround this windfall.

  • Read more from our 'Payback' series. 
  • Do you have concerns about how your state or locality is using the opioid settlement funds? Are they doing something effective that other places should replicate? Tell us here. 

Health Industry

Pain Clinics Made Millions From ‘Unnecessary’ Injections Into ‘Human Pin Cushions’
By Brett Kelman; Illustration by Oona Zenda

Pain MD, which once ran as many as 20 clinics across three states, gave chronic-pain patients about 700,000 total injections near their spines, according to court documents. Last year, federal prosecutors proved at trial that the shots were medically unnecessary and part of an extensive fraud scheme.

 

Deny and Delay? California Seeks Penalties for Insurers That Repeatedly Get It Wrong
By Christine Mai-Duc
A state lawmaker wants health insurers to disclose denial rates and explain those denials as anger grows over rising costs and uncovered medical care. If the bill is signed into law, health experts say, it could be one of the boldest attempts in the nation to rein in denials.

This Week's KFF Health News Minute

2023_kffhealthnews-minute

Hospitals seek ways to help people in the U.S. without legal status get care, and some schools say staffing shortages make it hard to help students who use continuous glucose monitors.

Listen to Sam Whitehead ▶️

KFF Health News on Air

Journalists Talk Southern Health Care: HIV Drug Access, Medicaid Expansion, Vaccination Rates
KFF Health News journalists made the rounds on national and local media recently to discuss topical stories. Here’s a collection of their appearances.

KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF — the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism. 

 

(c) 2025 KFF. All rights reserved.

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