Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp wants to let low-income parents with young kids enroll without working in a Medicaid program that provides coverage for some able-bodied adults.
ATLANTA, GA — An inpatient behavioral health system with facilities in metro Atlanta has reached a multi-million dollar, multi-state settlement over Medicare and Medicaid fraud.
During the first week of Georgia’s 2025 legislative session, Gov. Brian Kemp is outlining his priorities for the state.
With just nine months left for the test pilot program, Gov. Brian Kemp said he’s proposing new legislation to adjust how the Georgia Pathways to Coverage program works.
Georgia will seek federal approval to extend Medicaid coverage to some low-income parents and legal guardians of children through the age of six, Gov. Brian Kemp announced.
Gov. Kemp has introduced a series of health care proposals aimed at improving access to medical services in Georgia. These proposals are set to be discussed in the upcoming legislative session. The focus of Kemp's plan is to expand the Georgia Pathways program, which currently provides Medicaid coverage to low-income adults in the state.
Gov. Brian Kemp says parents of young children would no longer have to satisfy Georgia Pathways to Coverage’s work requirement under a revised plan for the Medicaid program that will be submitted to the federal government this spring.
ATLANTA — Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp announced Wednesday he wants to let low-income parents with young kids enroll without working in a Medicaid program that provides coverage for some able-bodied ...
ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp announced Wednesday he wants to let low-income parents with young kids enroll without working in a Medicaid program that provides coverage for some able ...
Some Parents Could Be Able to Join Georgia's Medicaid Program Without Working ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp announced Wednesday he wants to let low-income parents with young kids enroll ...
Florida’s program offers subsidized insurance for children who are not eligible for Medicaid and whose household incomes are up to 210 percent of the federal poverty level. As an example, a family of four at 200 percent of the poverty level in 2024 would have had income of $62,400, according to federal data.
It’s all the more tragic because HIV drugs can keep people from catching the virus, and prevent those living with the virus from passing it on. If everyone who needed these drugs could access them, activists say new HIV infections in Atlanta would fall by 90%, potentially saving taxpayers tens of millions of dollars.