The Soapbox

Hoodafan

Joined: 09/29/2013 Posts: 60650
Likes: 57097


For Medicaid patients, it's my understanding it is. Or at minimum less


in proportion to the number of patients now on Medicaid, e.g. providers did not increase at the same rate as Medicaid patients increased.

Regardless, if you're going to drastically increase the number of folks eligible for Medicaid, while simultaneously mandating the number of patients with health insurance, wouldn't you logically make drastic efforts to increase the supply? Seems to me that just saying it takes time won't cut it for those on Medicaid now.

(In response to this post by KCHoo)

Posted: 07/16/2017 at 2:50PM



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Current Thread:
  Michigan Study: Drop in unpaid hospital bills -- DanTheFan 07/16/2017 8:38PM
  This is all because the GOP sabotaged the program ** -- Tuckahokie 07/16/2017 12:20PM
  Increase is result of change by the hospital. -- DanTheFan 07/16/2017 12:54PM
  The other two had increase of 1-1.5% -- DanTheFan 07/16/2017 2:56PM
  You have to have providers to get these people care -- dajoka004 07/16/2017 1:12PM
  How so. ** -- KCHoo 07/16/2017 1:55PM
  See my above post ** -- dajoka004 07/16/2017 1:59PM
  Exactly. ** -- Hokie5150 07/16/2017 2:13PM

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