State of Indiana Medicaid DUR Annual Report For Federal Fiscal Year 2003Drug, Indiana
IndianaIndiana Medicaid’sAged and Disabled Waiveroffers a very wide range of support services to help individuals remain living at home, such as home modifications, respite care, meals, medical supplies, attendant care, and non-emergency transportation. TheIndiana Caregiver Homes / Structured Family ...
Impact of state medicaid expansion status on length of stay and in‐hospital mortality for general medicine patients at US academic medical centers Background: Medicaid is often associated with longer hospitalizations and higher in-hospital mortality than other insurance types. Objective: To characterize...
Indiana physicians suing state over Medicaid payment logjam.Reports on the class-action lawsuit filed by Medical Associates against Indiana's Medicaid office for delays in payments. Payment backlog after the installation of a new computer system; Cash advances paid by the Medicaid office.Japsen...
Pence said HIP 2.0 will not require any new state funding or additional taxes. The federal government will pick up the majority of the $16 billion expansion of Medicaid coverage in Indiana over the program's first six years, said Pence spokeswoman Christy Denault. ...
Mulling MedicaidFocuses on the state of Medicaid and the impact of federal changes to health care for the poor in Indiana. Funding to be passed on to state responsibility; Concern over the imposed time limit on welfare benefits.Beck, BillIndiana Business Mag...
Do they not care because of “public choice.” Do they not care because of limited cognitive ability? I don’t know. But I know that both Trump and Biden are doing something that will cause America to become a European-style welfare state. And that won’t be good for national ...
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Parents of two children with disabilities are suing an Indiana agency in federal court over changes to attendant care services they say violate the Americans with Disabilities Act and federal Medicaid laws.
This serial cross-sectional study examines whether US state Medicaid expansion is associated with county-level counts of opioid overdose deaths.