A spokesman for the state’s Medicaid program, Marc Williams, said in Colorado, children and pregnant women are the only undocumented people who receive Medicaid. The idea is to get them preventive care, so they don’t need costlier emergency coverage down the road.
Representatives in the U.S. House advanced a budget bill late Tuesday night. It proposed to cut billions of dollars in funding, but one particular area would have a major impact on Colorado's economy if U.
The state paid insurers at least $7.3 million, consisting of approximately $3.8 million in federal funds, for services for deceased Colorado residents.
The Colorado Department of Early Childhood had announced that its Early Intervention Colorado program planned to put a four-hour-a-month cap on services that children can receive.
Gov. Jared Polis and Democratic lawmakers want to cap state insurance payments to hospitals, but providers say they're already operating in the red.
The audit estimated that Colorado paid insurers at least $7.3 million, including both state money and about $3.8 million in federal funds, which the state might have to return. The payments were made on behalf of nearly 9,000 deceased Coloradans, according to the report.
Republicans have proposed lowering the federal share of costs for Medicaid expansions, which could reshape the program by gutting one of the Affordable Care Act’s major provisions.
Budget shortfall means Colorado’s young children with developmental delays will get fewer services
The changes would impact potentially thousands of children, especially those from low-income families who are on Medicaid.
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Chalkbeat on MSNCuts to Colorado Early Intervention program threaten therapies for young children with disabilitiesTherapy sessions for young children with disabilities could be pared back as Colorado officials look for ways to cut costs in the state’s Early Intervention program.
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Chalkbeat on MSNColorado lawmakers seek to reverse planned cuts to therapies for children with delaysA powerful legislative committee on Thursday sought to reverse some planned cuts to Colorado’s Early Intervention programs, which provides free therapies for young children with delays.
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