"We will further constrain Medicaid eligibility across all the different categories of eligibility," said Mitch Roob, Indiana FSSA secretary.
The Braun administration's directive to stop advertising Medicaid programs draws criticism from groups who say it cost businesses millions, while the state is attempting to lower Medicaid enrollment due to rising costs and a recent $1 billion budget shortfall.
Gov. Mike Braun's directive for Medicaid providers to cease all advertising on TV and radio in the state is getting a lot of push back from local broadcasters who rely on those advertising dollars.
Gov. Mike Braun’s administration has made it an immediate goal to get people off Medicaid, a publicly funded health insurance program for people with low incomes. One of the state's first strategies has been ordering all providers in Indiana to stop advertising Medicaid services.
A potential overhaul of the state’s Medicaid expansion program would include changes such as caps on enrollment and limits on lifetime eligibility. The overhaul would also reintroduce a proposal that the federal government previously blocked because it could lead to a loss of coverage.
Funding Indiana's Medicaid forecast
“Our goal is to find a sweet spot for this bill.” Another priority bill would introduce a cap to the state’s Healthy Indiana Plan, an expansion of traditional Medicaid to cover moderate-income Hoosiers who can’t afford other options. Sen. Ryan ...
Its two weeks into Indianas legislative session, and lawmakers across the state have filed more than 2,200 bills, only a fraction of which will become law. Heres a look at what Southern Indiana officials are focused on.
As Indiana’s 2025 legislative session begins, Republicans and Democrats in the state senate have outlined sharply contrasting agendas.
Families seeking support for a child with an autism spectrum disorder diagnosis might soon face a potential hurdle: as soon as April, Indiana’s Medicaid program could cap reimbursements for Applied Behavior Analysis therapy,
Battle lines were already forming Thursday over key policy differences as lawmakers wrapped up the first week of the 2025 legislative session.
On Wednesday, the Indiana Senate Republicans released its caucus agenda for the 2025 legislative session, a few of which lined up with the priorities of Indiana Gov.-elect