By MATTHEW HOLT
A very long time in the past in a special nation, there was a landslide election from a inhabitants in search of change. And alter they obtained. Individuals had been campaigning for nationwide well being care since 1917. There had been failures in 1933 and 1946 and 1961. However in 1965 they obtained it. Type of.
However a bizarre factor occurred within the Congress. Out of the political sausage making got here a plan that “Cared” for these over 65. Whereas one other plan got here out that “Support”ed the poor. (Stole that from the fantastic Adimika Arthur). Weirder nonetheless, the Medicare program was and is a Federally-funded program. The Medicaid program was a state-administered program, despite the fact that it was at the least half funded by the Feds.
That meant that Medicaid was at all times weak to the whims of states. In fact many states already had demonstrated dismal information in how they handled their poorer and minority populations previously (assume slavery, Jim Crow, KKK, separate colleges, consuming fountains, buses…you get the thought).
So whereas Medicare turned the savior program for anybody who made it to 65, and later for individuals who have been disabled or had kidney illness, Medicaid was a program for poor those who then obtained handled poorly. (Stole that from Jonathan Cohn). And proper now in 2025 it’s below extreme risk but once more.
Earlier than we get to that risk, it’s value trying on the program. Medicaid has advanced and now covers most nursing residence care (for “poor” seniors), look after the disabled, and even pays Medicare Half B premiums for folks too poor to pay their very own. It additionally covers medical insurance for poor folks below 65 and in these states that accepted ACA Medicaid growth, that’s a substantial quantity. In fact these are folks below an imaginary line that makes them too poor to purchase on the exchanges arrange by the ACA. And often Medicaid contains the CHIP program, an insurance coverage program that covers poor youngsters arrange below Clinton in 1997.
This chart from the venerable KFF reveals that whereas 75% of individuals on Medicaid are, poor, below 65, and never categorised as disabled, 50% of the cash goes to those that are usually not.

This all leads to a bizarro world in which there’s one Federal authorities program for folks over 65 and the disabled, after which a wholly totally different state-based one, which spends 1/2 of its cash on people who find themselves over 65 and disabled and who’re additionally within the Federal program. That is plain silly and at all times has been.
In fact there may be extra to it than that.
Many states that don’t share that accomplice heritage have carried out so much with Medicaid. Oregon for instance has at all times tried to extend protection and spend cash on neighborhood care otherwise. Doctor and three time Oregon governor John Kitzhaber could be very vocal about what they did earlier than the ACA and how Medicaid should change to reflect these new realities.
Since 2012, below an 1115 waiver, Oregon Medicaid has been supplied by means of new Coordinated Care Organizations (CCOs)— community-based organizations charged with offering high quality medical care, whereas focusing additionally on neighborhood well being. They function on a worldwide funds listed to a per member per 12 months a development fee that’s decrease than medical inflation. CCOs are additionally required to take care of enrollment and advantages, whereas assembly rigorous metrics round high quality, outcomes and affected person satisfaction.In the course of the first 5-year waiver interval, Oregon enrolled an extra 384,000 folks and operated throughout the per member per 12 months development fee. All CCOs met the required high quality and end result metrics, and realized a web cumulative financial savings of $1.1 billion.
In truth Oregon is certainly not the one state that has carried out one thing totally different. California massively expanded protection put up the ACA and now 15m folks or over ⅓ of its inhabitants is on Medicaid. Together with that, there was a ton of experimentation throughout the program. These 1115 Waivers, that are required to spend that Federal cash in a approach not envisaged within the 1965 Act have labored extra time within the Golden State on a state and county stage. The overview is that Medicaid right here has been become a extra complete program known as CalAIM (California Advancing and Innovating Medi-Cal) which covers all types of issues not in conventional Medicaid together with doulas, neighborhood well being staff ( who might also be barbers!) and in some counties housing and meals.
Regardless of these enhancements I wouldn’t recommend that you simply intentionally transfer to Oregon or California and grow to be poor. (Stole that line from my late boss at Harris, Bob Lietman)
However there’s a ton extra taking place in Medicaid nationally. Because the Nineteen Nineties most care has been steered into non-public well being plans, though many are publicly run. However Centene and Molina particularly have constructed very worthwhile enterprise on Medicaid in an analogous solution to how United, Humana et al have mined Medicare Benefit.
And though not strictly talking working through Medicaid itself, we’ve additionally constructed out a lot of different funding sources for safety-net suppliers. This contains the 340B program which hospitals use to earn cash on medicine, DiSH funds which go to hospitals who deal with extra of the poor, after which there’s about $35bn+ in federal funding to FQHCs which deal with a whole lot of uninsured and Medicaid populations.
So we’ve constructed this extremely bloated mess of a program. It’s principally administered by organizations which are industrial or county plans that don’t appear to be the plans common employed Individuals get their coinsurance from. These plans buy care from a community of services (FQHCs, county hospitals et al) that get a lot of their cash from Medicaid, or use a bunch of different methods to lift funds. And people supplier establishments don’t look very similar to or share a lot clientele with the common docs and well being techniques the place most employed Individuals or these on Medicare get their care.
And also you thought separate however equal was abolished within the Fifties!
Now in fact, Medicaid is below nice risk, as in some methods is the ACA. The Trump Administration, that includes a South African immigrant wandering round with a literal and figurative chainsaw, has promised cuts. The commonest quantity advised is $880Bn over 10 years. Now that could be a large chunk. $90B – the annual equal – is round 15% of Federal spending on this system. In fact this can be a program that spends lots in Purple states, however in fact loads of that spending in crimson states is on black and brown folks, and lots of white Trump voters don’t understand that it additionally covers loads of their white political allies. Wendell Potter and Joey Rettino identified that given many states call it something different than Medicaid, it’s attainable a bunch of Trump voting low-information voters in crimson states might not understand it covers them!
Even so a 15% discount, in a program that’s unfold skinny like peanut butter and already pays low charges to suppliers and nursing properties, shall be bother.
The opposite query is round regulation. These ubiquitous 1115 Waivers enable a lot of applications that aren’t within the unique laws, and naturally getting or renewing a waiver from the brand new HHS and CMS could also be tough. For positive the Republicans are obsessive about ensuring anybody on Medicaid is working. These “work necessities” have been rolled out in a couple of states over the last Trump Administration. They ended up saving no money, and were unnecessarily honorous. However given the needs of the present Administration to be as merciless as attainable, it’s extremely probably that ideology wins out right here and work necessities or different foolish shit could also be imposed on each state.
So the present battle goes to be the Dems in blue states attempting to maintain Medicaid as is. Nicely see how that performs out, and whether or not the Trumpers can maintain their skinny majority collectively when a few of them understand what it means.
However that’s not what we needs to be doing with Medicaid. As an alternative we must always make the leap that the Clintons tried to take however that Obama and the ACA ducked.
We shouldn’t reform or defund Medicaid. We should always abolish it.
If as an alternative we must always use that Medicaid cash to create a correct common well being care system, and put folks on Medicaid on the identical monetary and supply platform as Medicare and industrial insurance coverage. Whether or not we try this in a multi-payer world because the Japanese and Germans do, a principally single payer model just like the French or Taiwanese or a nationalized system just like the UK and Sweden, it will take away the second class well being care standing of the ⅓ of our residents who don’t have Medicare or good non-public insurance coverage. As well as, it will allow our medical professionals to observe drugs the way in which they wished to once they have been younger and idealistic, and never have to fret about how a lot every affected person would pay, as they’d get the identical quantity regardless of who they have been treating.
Let’s get the political momentum going to argue for equal remedy for all in America, and never maintain round a welfare program that emerged from a political mistake in 1965.
Matthew Holt is the Writer of THCB