News

Planned Parenthood provides necessary health care for many unable to access Medicaid after state and federal cuts.
New state legislation in Indiana could significantly change how Medicaid and the Healthy Indiana Plan (HIP) are managed. Signed by Gov. Mike Braun last week and set to go into effect on July 1 ...
Healthy Indiana Plan could reduce care for hundreds of thousands Indiana’s version of the provider tax, the Hospital Assessment Fee, plays a crucial role in funding Medicaid by generating ...
Indiana New law could impact number of Hoosiers on Medicaid's Healthy Indiana Program, advocates say Since Medicaid is run jointly by both the state and federal government, Indiana needs federal ...
And here in Indiana, Republican legislators are advancing Senate Bill 2, which would kick more than 200,000 people off the Healthy Indiana Plan, one of the state’s largest Medicaid programs.
Indiana lawmakers consider adding work requirements to the Healthy Indiana Plan, but users warn of potential problems and unnecessary restrictions.
Senate Bill 2 would cap the number of Hoosiers who receive Medicaid through the state’s Healthy Indiana Plan at 500,000 people.
A House committee opted on Tuesday to remove an explicit cap on the Healthy Indiana Plan that would restrict enrollment to 500,000 people but kept the controversial work requirements, passing ...
A priority Senate Bill was sent to the Senate floor Thursday that would potentially cap enrollment in the Healthy Indiana Plan, a Medicaid program for adults who don't qualify for traditional ...
Indiana Senate Republicans have made reforming HIP one of their top priorities, a move that could effectively cut nearly 200,000 Hoosiers off the plan, and constrict its benefits. Proponents say ...
Hoosier lawmakers face difficult choices over Medicaid, affecting several million citizens who either receive Medicaid or participate in the Healthy Indiana Plan. These choices also affect health ...
Indiana Senate approves bill to cap Healthy Indiana Plan users and implement work requirement, with 40-9 vote in favor. Bill now heads to House.