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Wednesday, Jun 17 2026 UPDATED 9:12 AM

Full Issue

States Scrambling To Prep For Biggest Medicaid Change Since ACA: Work Requirements

This month, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services laid out regulations and federal standards for work requirements, which will go live Jan. 1, 2027, Modern Healthcare reports. States claim the newly released CMS guidance differs significantly from the previous general guidance and "will create significant administrative and resource burdens."

The race is on for states to iron out their Medicaid work requirement plans and tie up loose ends for providers, insurers and beneficiaries. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services issued a long-awaited regulation this month laying out federal standards for work requirements. But states facing down a Jan. 1, 2027, deadline to have the system running will have to quickly rethink their strategies because CMS caught them by surprise on key issues. States, health insurance companies, providers, enrollees and other stakeholders have less than six months to implement the biggest change to Medicaid since the Affordable Care Act of 2010 expansion. For policies this complex, thats no time at all. (Early, 6/16)

In other Medicaid and Medicare news

Floridas Medicaid shows the country's fourth largest decline since 2025, and advocates say that means more uninsured children. Meantime, the state prepares for a lawsuit over its stalled KidCare expansion. (Pedersen, 6/17)

With about 110,000 poor adults at risk of losing Medicaid coverage under new federal work rules this January, officials are scrambling to avert a swell in uninsured patients forced to seek care through hospital emergency departments. (Phaneuf and Golvala, 6/17)

Shanna Western still remembers seeing her grandfather waving both hands in unison through a hospital window. He called it his twin wave, a greeting and a goodbye to Western and her twin sister.In the 1980s, hospitals generally discouraged children from visiting patients in the hospital rooms. Her grandfather died that night. Western never got the chance to say goodbye in person.(Schabacker, 6/17)

Beneficiaries face a series of complex decisions in enrolling in Medicare coverage, and a key federal panel outlines some of the pain points. The Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) released its June report to Congress on Monday, where it notes that when an individual becomes Medicare eligible, they have to immediately make a series of decisions about coverage that may be confusing. (Minemyer and Muoio, 6/16)

Scammers have gotten crafty about tricking people out of their money, and often they use purported Medicare concerns as a way into the wallets of older people. (Neumann, 6/16)

Pushback on ACA regulation

窪蹋勛圖厙 News: Democrats Seek To Spotlight Rising Health Costs By Forcing Vote On Trump Regulation

In a move that mixes pure politics with weedy congressional procedures, Senate Democrats are seeking to force a vote to overturn a Trump administration rule that they say will make it harder to enroll in Affordable Care Act health plans and sharply raise out-of-pocket costs for those who do. The measure is unlikely to pass in the Republican-controlled Congress, but Democrats could use the vote against their opponents on the campaign trail. When the ACA rule was released in May, the Trump administration touted it as a means to combat enrollment fraud, lower premiums for some people, and offer a wider range of insurance plans, including ones with no set network of doctors or hospitals. (Appleby, 6/17)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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