Jointly funded by states and the federal government,Medicaidprovides no-cost health coverage to low-income adults, children, pregnant women, elderly adults, people with disabilities and others. TheOregon Health Plan(OHP) is the state’s Medicaid program, which is also available to Oregonians regardl...
Oregon offers a state Medicaid managed care plan for citizens who qualify, offering health care coverage to those who may not otherwise qualify. While the program is known for offering innovative programs, it has come under scrutiny from lawmakers and the public for failing to meet funding goals ...
In 2008, Oregon held a lottery for restricted access to its Medicaid program for uninsured low-income adults not otherwise eligible for public coverage. The Oregon Health Insurance Experiment used this opportunity to conduct the first randomized controlled study of a public insurance expansion. This ...
The state, with federal approval, has the discretion to set reimbursement rates, with the state general fund picking up roughly 22 cents of every dollar and the balance coming from the federal government through Medicaid funding for low-income Oregonians. Those rate...
The bill would also allocate almost $500,000 over the next two years to expand cost-free reproductivehealthcoverage, including abortions, to immigrants who are otherwise ineligible under the Oregon Health Plan—the state's Medicaid program that currently spends nearly $2 million a year to pay for...
coverage that Voegele enjoyed, but other new rules for insurers, such as a ban on annual and lifetime coverage caps or discriminating against those with pre-existing conditions. The law also includes increased eligibility for Medicaid and new limits on prescription drug costs for Medicare enrollees...
Beaverton Bend C Corvallis D E Eugene F G Gresham H Hillsboro I J K L M 9 M N O P Portland Q R S 9 S T 9 T U V W X Y Z About O O, or o, is the fifteenth letter and the fourth vowel letter of the Latin alphabet, used in the modern English alphabet, the alphabets of...
In 2008, Oregon held a lottery for restricted access to its Medicaid program for uninsured low-income adults not otherwise eligible for public coverage. The Oregon Health Insurance Experiment used this opportunity to conduct the first randomized controlled study of a public insurance expansion. This ...