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The extent to which individuals who are eligible for Medicaid are enrolled and remain enrolled varies by state. This is partly due to variability in state policies.
Under the Affordable Care Act, states may expand Medicaid eligibility to cover adults without dependent children if their incomes are at or below 138 percent of the federal poverty level.
More than 12 million people are simultaneously eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid.
Two types of Medicaid coverage are available for Medicare beneficiaries with low incomes:
The lack of meaningful contact with others is a significant risk factor for many health conditions. This lack of interaction is known as social isolation.
People age 50 and older make 85 percent of their local trips by private vehicle. The vast majority of them hold a driver’s license.
How Medicaid programs operate in each state is determined by two primary mechanisms.
For many Americans, health care is uncoordinated and difficult to obtain. In addition, quality is uneven and the cost is increasingly unaffordable.
Safety-net providers typically include community health centers, public hospitals, free clinics, rural clinics, and local health departments.
The National Quality Strategy (NQS), established as part of the Affordable Care Act, serves as a catalyst for a nationwide focus on quality improvement efforts and approach