Oklahoma just recently passed the Medicaid expansion via direct vote. The government did its best to stop it, but the voters ended up prevailing.
So what do they do? Instead of just running a Medicaid program as intended and as their constituents demanded, they did their best to privatize the Medicaid expansion.
This week BCBS, Humana, and i believe Edna now run our Medicaid program. Basically the governor is just throwing millions of dollars at them and allowing them to decide what and who is covered.
Medicaid was expanded in NC only a few months ago, hence why we look like an un-expanded state still.
Because the red is largely just a map of poor areas on average.
Aside from preventative care, Medicare generally doesn't pay for all medical expenses, just a percentage. When you're left paying 20% coinsurance for most urgent needs you get saddled with massive debt you can't climb out of. Medicaid covers more of the gap but is still limited. Private plans more commonly cover 100% after a deductible. Some states like Massachusetts have chosen to expand it further than other states. We're a bad example for this map though because we have so few counties.
The entire map could be 0 mean debt if we had true single payer healthcare.
It's also interesting seeing how this is a mean, not median. I suspect if median was shown almost all counties would be 0. There's a lot more stats that could be used to show why the southern states are losing out though.
Maine has the oldest demographic in the US, and the lowest median income in the northeast.
some red? I don't understand. Do you think the expanded medicaid is a cure all? Its not universal healthcare it just reduces the red from where you see it in the intense red areas.
A lot of red! Look at Oklahoma! Or Missouri!
California is some red. One red county, fine.
More than a dozen? Something is seriously wrong in these states and I want to know why Medicaid expansion didn't fix it. There's an explaination, don't just handwave it away.
I was gonna say, wtf is going on with Wyoming
You don't need medicine when you've got guns
You don’t need medicine when you’ve got bootstraps.
Debt is power. If you're in debt, someone has power over you. This isn't an accident, there is no surprisePikachu, it's a purposeful decision to reject anything that would help people retain their own power over their lives.
And if we all default, it's mutually assured destruction! Right? Right???
Oh wait no, just further transfer of wealth after the crash.
So low income people in states that didnt expand medicaid also dont qualify for any subsidies for private insurance. Its a big problem with the ACA that Biden campaigned on fixing. Not a word on it since elected.
Im blinded at how bright Minnesota is shinning rn. Is this actually accurate?
wtf is going on in Oklahoma, Missouri, Maine, North Carolina, Indiana, etc? Expand Medicaid and still be in the red for medical debt 🤨
We voted to expand it but our Governor hates Missourians so they aren't doing anything with the $$
https://www.npr.org/2021/05/13/996611586/missouri-will-not-expand-medicaid-despite-voters-wishes-governor-says
Cool cool cool.
How is this legal lol
Oklahoma just recently passed the Medicaid expansion via direct vote. The government did its best to stop it, but the voters ended up prevailing.
So what do they do? Instead of just running a Medicaid program as intended and as their constituents demanded, they did their best to privatize the Medicaid expansion.
This week BCBS, Humana, and i believe Edna now run our Medicaid program. Basically the governor is just throwing millions of dollars at them and allowing them to decide what and who is covered.
Medicaid was expanded in NC only a few months ago, hence why we look like an un-expanded state still.
Because the red is largely just a map of poor areas on average.
Aside from preventative care, Medicare generally doesn't pay for all medical expenses, just a percentage. When you're left paying 20% coinsurance for most urgent needs you get saddled with massive debt you can't climb out of. Medicaid covers more of the gap but is still limited. Private plans more commonly cover 100% after a deductible. Some states like Massachusetts have chosen to expand it further than other states. We're a bad example for this map though because we have so few counties.
The entire map could be 0 mean debt if we had true single payer healthcare.
It's also interesting seeing how this is a mean, not median. I suspect if median was shown almost all counties would be 0. There's a lot more stats that could be used to show why the southern states are losing out though.
Maine has the oldest demographic in the US, and the lowest median income in the northeast.
some red? I don't understand. Do you think the expanded medicaid is a cure all? Its not universal healthcare it just reduces the red from where you see it in the intense red areas.
A lot of red! Look at Oklahoma! Or Missouri!
California is some red. One red county, fine.
More than a dozen? Something is seriously wrong in these states and I want to know why Medicaid expansion didn't fix it. There's an explaination, don't just handwave it away.