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There is no question that Medicaid programs can use all the legitimate cost-cutting ideas they can get, but Idaho has gone the extra mile.
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Husbands or wives who care for spouses with dementia are six times more likely to develop the memory-impairing condition than those whose spouses don't have it, according to the results of a 12-year study led by Johns Hopkins, Utah State University, and Duke University.
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Community Care of North Carolina, an enhanced Primary Care Case Management (PCCM) program, uses a "population management" approach to manage high-cost Medicaid clients.
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Georgia, like many states, is in the process of collecting data to show the results of its Money Follows the Person (MFP) program. "To date, 305 individuals left the nursing home and returned to the community," reports Alice Hogan, PMP, program director for Waiver Services at the Georgia Department of Community Health's Division of Medicaid, and acting project director for the state's MFP program.
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The option to expand Medicaid coverage to childless adults immediately, instead of waiting until 2014, is one fiscal opportunity for states included in health care reform legislation. In April 2010, Connecticut became the first state to formally seek approval under the new federal law to cover more individuals under Medicaid.
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While state Medicaid programs have projected the expected number of individuals coming in to the program in 2014 as a result of health care reform, it's less understood who these individuals will be. Are they a relatively healthy group, or are do they have complex, costly health care needs?
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Children with private health insurance are more than six and a half times as likely to lose coverage in the three months after one or both of their parents loses a job, compared to children whose parents remain employed, according to researchers from the Child Policy Research Center at Cincinnati (OH) Children's Hospital Medical Center.
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