Medicaid and CHIP Eligibility, Enrollment, Renewal, and Cost Sharing Policies as of January 2018: Findings from a 50-State Survey
Executive Summary
Rachel Garfield and Anthony Damino, The Coverage Gap: Uninsured Poor Adults in States that Do Not Expand Medicaid, (Washington, DC: Kaiser Family Foundation, November 2017), https://www.kff.org/uninsured/issue-brief/the-coverage-gap-uninsured-poor-adults-in-states-that-do-not-expand-medicaid/
Medicaid and CHIP Eligibility
Ibid.
Utah also changed from using a dollar threshold to a threshold tied to the FPL for parent eligibility.
These include seven states (California, District of Columbia, Illinois, Massachusetts, New York, Oregon, and Washington) that provide state-only coverage for income-eligible children, two states (New Jersey and New York) and the District of Columbia that provide state-only coverage for income-eligible pregnant women, and seven (California, Hawaii, Massachusetts, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania) and the District of Columbia provide state-only funded coverage for some income-eligible adults.
Premiums and Cost Sharing
Under the MOE, states may not impose new premiums or increase premiums for children outside of inflation or routine increases approved before 2010.