FY 2026 budget reconciliation bill

Medicaid Work Rule May Hit Chronically Ill

The introduction of a work requirement for Medicaid eligibility may have the greatest impact on Medicaid beneficiaries with chronic illnesses. According to a new analysis of the approximately five million people who are likely to lose their Medicaid eligibility between now and 2034 because of the new work requirement introduced in the FY 2026 budget reconciliation bill (the “One Big Beautiful Act Bill,”) more than 85 percent have at least one chronic medical condition and more than 40 percent have at least three such conditions.  The percentages rise, moreover, among current Medicaid beneficiaries over the age of 50. Some of [...]

2025-10-07T13:44:24-04:00October 8, 2025|Medicaid|

Looking at Potential Health Coverage Losses

Changes adopted in the FY 2026 budget reconciliation bill (“the One Big Beautiful Bill” Act) could result in a significant increase in the ranks of the uninsured across the country. According to an Urban Institute analysis supported by the Commonwealth Fund, if current expanded health insurance premium tax credits end with the beginning of the new federal fiscal year on October 1, 4.8 million more people would become uninsured, a 21 percent increase. 3 million fewer people across the U.S. would get subsidized marketplace coverage. Premiums would soar.  For people earning less than 250 percent of poverty (about $39,000 for [...]

2025-09-18T16:37:45-04:00September 22, 2025|Affordable Care Act, deficit reduction|

The Coming Medicaid Work Requirement

Among the many Medicaid-related aspects of the recently enacted FY 2026 budget reconciliation bill – the One Big Beautiful Bill Act – is a new requirement that much of the Medicaid population be employed or participate in some acceptable form of “community engagement.” But how will the work requirement work?  How will it be implemented and enforced? KFF has taken an in-depth look at this matter, reporting on such issues as: What the new law requires. The timeline for the work requirement’s implementation. How much money the states and the federal government stand to save by ending Medicaid How many [...]

2025-08-05T17:24:07-04:00August 6, 2025|Congress, Medicaid|

The New Rural Health Fund

Recognizing that the Medicaid and other health care cuts in the recently enacted FY 2026 budget reconciliation bill – the so-called One Big Beautiful Bill – will exact a heavy toll on rural hospitals, Congress included in that bill a short-term Rural Health Fund designed to help ameliorate the impact of some of the cuts it was adopting. KFF Health has taken a closer look at the Rural Health Fund, how it is structured, and how it is expected to work and has identified some of the bill’s major components.  They include: The rural health fund includes $50 billion, which [...]

Health Care Implications of Senate Reconciliation Bill

On Tuesday the Senate passed an FY 2026 budget reconciliation bill by a vote of 51-50, with Vice President Vance casting the tie-breaking vote. The bill cuts $1 trillion in Medicaid spending and keeps most of the Medicaid provisions included in the version released by the Senate Finance Committee in mid-June.  The bill passed by the Senate creates a fund for rural providers of $50 billion over five years. The major Medicaid provisions in the bill include: A freeze on the size of Medicaid provider taxes, phased down reductions of current taxes toward a new, lower limit for many states, [...]

Federal Health Policy Update for June 12

The following is the latest health policy news from the federal government for June 6-12.  Some of the language used below is taken directly from government documents. Congress Republican senators continue to work on their version of a reconciliation bill with a goal of passage by July 4, although that deadline may slip.  Some Senate committees have begun releasing their portions of the bill but the Finance Committee’s bill, with its tax and Medicaid provisions, has not yet been released.  Among the majority party in the Senate, fault lines around the House-passed reconciliation bill remain around Medicaid provider taxes, state [...]

Federal Health Policy Update for June 5

The following is the latest health policy news from the federal government for May 30 to June 5.  Some of the language used below is taken directly from government documents. Congress Congress returned to Washington D.C., where Republican senators continue to work on their version of a reconciliation bill with a goal of passage by the full Congress by July 4.  Some Senate committees have begun releasing their portions of the bill but the committees with jurisdiction over Medicaid – the Finance and Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) committees – have not committed to a timeline for their bills.  [...]

Federal Health Policy Update for May 29

The following is the latest health policy news from the federal government for May 23-29.  Some of the language used below is taken directly from government documents. Congress The House and Senate are out of Washington, D.C. this week for the Memorial Day holiday and will return to Washington on June 3.  Senate Republican staff is working on the House-passed reconciliation bill to identify provisions that may need to change or be excluded to comply with the Senate’s rules for reconciliation bills.  At the same time, some Republican senators have expressed opposition to the House reconciliation bill; some maintain that [...]

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