error
- Could not retrieve the oEmbed resource.
Protect Medicaid: Save Lives, Save Communities
Medicaid funding is crucial to AFT members and the communities we serve. Access to healthcare is key for seeking and maintaining a job, but Congress is moving to cut Medicaid funding by $880 billion. Click and scroll down to see how your community could be impacted.
Cuts to Medicaid will impact schools and hospitals and public services.
Schools
State Medicaid programs—and federal contributions to Medicaid, which cover at least half of spending—have been instrumental in ensuring consistent financing. Since 1988, Medicaid dollars in schools have supported:
- Salaries for health professionals, such as speech pathologists, occupational therapists and school nurses;
- High-quality physical and mental health services such as targeted case management, health education, cognitive behavioral therapy, catheterization, audiology and physical therapy;
- Medical transportation for select students with individual education programs;
- Equipment, including wheelchairs, lifts and therapeutic bicycles; and
- Program administration, which can include helping eligible families enroll and even translations for diverse populations.
- Click here (and scroll down) to see the percentage of students supported by Medicaid/CHIP in your school district
Hospitals
Hospitals rely on Medicaid payments to stay open and adequately staffed. Funding cuts to hospitals are likely to lead to staffing cuts, putting patients in unnecessary danger, closing essential services, and devastating communities. We break down how this will happen in our analysis here.
Medicaid spent $262.6 billion on hospital care in 2022. Hospital spending accounted for 33 percent of total Medicaid spending and Medicaid payments to hospitals accounted for 19 percent of all payments to hospitals in 2022.
Medicaid Disproportionate Share Hospital funding helps to keep safety-net hospitals open. AFT members are currently fighting to keep SUNY Downstate open.
Click here to see how many people use Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program in your Congressional district: https://ccf.georgetown.edu/2024/12/04/medicaid-chip-coverage-by-congressional-district-2023/
Public Employees and Higher Education
Retirees
AARP states that "Medicaid is the nation’s largest payer for long-term care (LTC), which include hands-on assistance with basic tasks such as feeding, bathing, and dressing. Medicaid LTC enrollees are often older adults with serious and often complex care needs, including Alzheimer’s and other dementias. Having Medicaid can be the reason an older adult can get out of bed, get dressed, and go about their day. Medicaid program dollars have been shown to provide stability in the health care system, particularly in lowering rates of rural hospital closures. Medicaid’s direct support for health care and LTC access and reliable reimbursement rates for hospitals and providers also indirectly support surrounding local economies supporting employment and financial stability. More than 2.7 million Medicaid-enrolled adults ages 50 and older live in rural areas."
The cuts proposed by the House of Representatives may impact you even if you plan to enroll in Medicare:
- Medicaid covers premiums for 1 in 6 Medicare enrollees.
- Medicaid covers Medicare’s co-insurance, co-pays, and deductibles, for 8 million Medicare enrollees.
- While Medicare covers short-term skilled nursing facility stays following a hospitalization, Medicaid covers the majority of long-term stays.
- Medicaid also covers critical services that Medicare does not, such as transportation to medical appointments, medical equipment like mobilized wheelchairs, dental, vision, and hearing benefits, and some treatment options for substance use disorder.