Health First Kosciusko Discusses New, Upcoming Community Health Initiatives
Health First Kosciusko celebrates successes and focuses on more community health initiatives coming soon.
Read MoreHealth First Kosciusko celebrates successes and focuses on more community health initiatives coming soon.
Read MoreA program providing hundreds of thousands of Hoosiers health insurance could be in jeopardy after a Washington D.C. judge on Thursday vacated a federal approval for the Healthy Indiana Plan.
Read MoreFor the first time in years, certain Indiana Medicaid beneficiaries will start paying premiums again — a concern for advocates who say that enrollees are unprepared and point to federal concerns about the rule’s effectiveness.
Read MoreNegotiations between a group representing senior care organizations and the insurers tasked with overseeing the state’s summer transition of long-term care services collapsed earlier this month after the two sides couldn’t come to an agreement — but the impact is still unclear for older Hoosiers.
Read MoreBowen Health Clinic is offering video appointments with licensed therapists to make it easier for patients to obtain the health care they need.
Read MoreHundreds of thousands of Hoosiers recently transferred into the Affordable Care Act Health Insurance Marketplace, many of them first-time users of the program.
Read MoreThe state’s April Medicaid expenditure forecast missed the mark by roughly $984 million due to a combination of state budget reversions and unexpected growth of services for aging and disabled Hoosiers, leaving a state agency scrambling for a solution as lawmakers consider how much to cover from the state’s reserve funds.
Read MoreAn estimated 130,000 Hoosiers over the age of 60 using Medicaid will receive notices in early 2024 advising them to choose a Managed Care Entity to coordinate their health coverage under the state’s Pathways for Aging program.
Read MoreAs Indiana hits the halfway point for the Medicaid unwinding process, the rate of Hoosiers losing benefits seems to have slowed as the state reassesses the coverage of millions of beneficiaries following the expiration of pandemic protections.
Read MoreAs Hoosiers are getting older and Indiana’s long-term care system evolves to embrace the needs of a more complicated population, state officials are finalizing a potential $15 billion worth of contracts pivoting to managed care.
Read MoreThe Indiana Family and Social Services Administration has increased proposed reimbursement rates for autism therapy services for Hoosier children with Medicaid after pushback from families, providers and state lawmakers.
Read MoreThe number of Hoosiers without health insurance decreased between 2021 and 2022, falling 0.6% to 7% uninsured, according to a release from the United States Census Bureau.
Read MoreHealth care representatives from across the United States are urging Congress to halt cuts to funding that helps hospitals care for uninsured or low-income patients who rely on Medicaid.
Read MoreIndianapolis parents Breanna and Dakota Powell have two autistic children, ages 3 and 6, and spent years in early intervention services but saw little improvement — until they started Applied Behavioral Analysis therapy, or ABA therapy for short.
Read MoreThousands of Hoosiers who got their health coverage through Medicaid during the COVID-19 outbreak risk losing it now that the pandemic has ended.
Read MoreThis year’s fiscal closeout data shows that two-thirds of state agencies and offices sent less than 1% of the money allocated to them back to the state general fund.
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