Georgia spent $54.2 million in less than five years to administer the country's only Medicaid program with work requirements—more than twice as much as it spent to provide health care to enrollees, ...
ATLANTA - A federal watchdog found Georgia’s program requiring able-bodied adults to document low-paying work to get Medicaid has spent much more on administrative costs than on providing health care.
ATLANTA - Georgia’s program that provides health insurance to some low-income adults that document work or other activities has been extended for 15 months by President Donald Trump’s administration.
FILE - Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., speaks during a news conference on the Voting Rights Advancement Act, on Capitol Hill Tuesday, July 29, 2025, in Washington. (AP ...
A state-level preview of the Big Beautiful Bill’s Medicaid reforms didn’t improve employment or result in gains in insurance coverage. By Simar Bajaj A new study adds to a growing body of evidence ...
Most of the tax dollars used to launch and implement the nation’s only Medicaid work requirement program have gone toward paying administrative costs rather than covering health care for Georgians, ...
ATLANTA — The Georgia Pathways to Coverage program, which aims to expand health insurance coverage to low-income Georgians while adding work requirements, was reported as having high administrative ...
Every day, hardworking Georgians depend on stable, affordable health care to keep their families healthy and our state’s economy strong. Nearly one in five – about 2.3 million people – rely on ...
A federal watchdog reported Thursday that Georgia's program requiring able-bodied adults to document low-paying work to get Medicaid has spent much more on administrative costs than on providing ...
ATLANTA (AP) — A federal watchdog reported Thursday on a Georgia Medicaid program that requires able-bodied adults to document low-paying work to be eligible for health care, a model the Trump ...