Over 40% of the 5 million people at risk of losing Medicaid coverage due to new eligibility requirements have at least three chronic health conditions, and older adults are especially vulnerable, a new JAMA study shows.
Signed into law on July 4, HR 1 makes significant changes to Medicaid, including the establishment of new work requirements. Previous Yale-led research has shown that Medicaid recipients who do not meet work requirements have disproportionately worse health than those who do.
In the new study, Yale School of Medicine (YSM) researchers used data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) to dive deeper into understanding the clinical characteristics of those at-risk of disenrollment. Their analyses confirmed that the prevalence of chronic disease is high among this cohort, especially for adults between the ages of 50 and 64.
“It’s important to see the real-world impact of legislation that is passed,” says Alissa Chen, MD, MPH, instructor of internal medicine at YSM and the study’s senior author. “We’re seeing that people who are not meeting work requirements have quite high medical needs.”