Source: Health Policy Institute of Ohio
On April 29, The Obama Administration moved to improve low Medicaid enrollment for emerging prisoners, urging states to start signups before release and expanding eligibility to thousands of former inmates in halfway houses near the end of their sentences (Source: “HHS Acts To Help More Ex-Inmates Get Medicaid,” Kaiser Health News, April 29, 2016).
Health coverage for ex-inmates “is critical to our goal of reducing recidivism and promoting public health,” said Richard Frank, assistant secretary for planning for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
Advocates praised the changes, but cautioned that HHS and states are still far from ensuring that most people leaving prisons and jails are put on Medicaid and get access to treatment. The 2010 health law made nearly all ex-prisoners eligible for Medicaid in states that chose to expand the state and federal insurance program for the poor.