Medicaid provides medical benefits to individuals and families for lower income, and more children in Louisiana receive Medicaid benefits. Working families apply for this benefit as they can not provide health care for their families. Applying for this benefit does not mean that the person is unemployed or inappropriate, but some people simply can not afford additional funds deducted from wages. These children 's parents want their families to receive medical benefits for health, personal or accidental purposes.
Medicaid helps provide medical care to over 74 million people - the elderly, children, disabled, pregnant women and low-income people. After rolling back the expansion of the planned ACA, Republican lawmakers have proposed an idea to offer the Medicaid fund to the state through "street subsidies" or "per capita ceiling". Such reforms will be devastating. First of all, they lead to a significant reduction in the program and endanger the care and service of tens of millions of children, the elderly and the disabled. They will also transfer costs to the state on a large scale and weaken the capacity of the program to cope with economic downturn and new diseases. The structure of a lump sum payment or maximum per capita threatens the livelihood of the program because it can provide medical treatment but gives the state the opportunity to use Medicaid as "fundraising fund" for other completely irrelevant projects I can do it.
On Thursday, Kansas State lawmakers proposed a Medicaid expansion proposal. Despite discussions on health reform on the Medical Reform Fund, it is heading to the Senate now. Supporters of expansion do not want the national debate to hurt Kansas demand, but the opponents want Kansas' legislators to wait until the federal debate on Medicaid expansion funds is resolved. The House of Representatives plans to pass the US medical law tonight (Thursday, March 23), but the vote was postponed. In spite of the delay, the White House is confident in the ability to vote quickly yet. White House Deputy spokesman Sarah Huckabee Sanders said: "The debate is started as planned tonight and voting will be held in the morning to avoid voting at 3 am This bill will pass in the morning I believe it will be done. "