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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

How The Supreme Court's Medicaid Decision May Affect Health Centers: An Early Estimate, Katherine J. Hayes, Peter Shin, Sara J. Rosenbaum Jul 2012

How The Supreme Court's Medicaid Decision May Affect Health Centers: An Early Estimate, Katherine J. Hayes, Peter Shin, Sara J. Rosenbaum

Geiger Gibson/RCHN Community Health Foundation Research Collaborative

The nation's federally funded health centers are the principal source of primary health care for medically underserved populations. In CY 2011, more than 1,200 health centers, operating in more than 8,500 urban and rural locations, served 20.2 million patients, 36 percent of whom were uninsured and 93 percent of whom had family incomes below twice the federal poverty level. Federal grants provide core support to health centers, but Medicaid represents the largest single health center financing mechanism, accounting for 39 percent of revenues. Medicaid revenue growth allows health centers to preserve their core grant funding to reach uninsured patients while …


Medicaid And Community Health Centers: The Relationship Between Coverage For Adults And Primary Care Capacity In Medically Underserved Communities, Peter Shin, Sara J. Rosenbaum, Brian K. Bruen, Alice (Xiao-Xiao) Lu, Rachel Arguello, Jennifer Tolbert Mar 2012

Medicaid And Community Health Centers: The Relationship Between Coverage For Adults And Primary Care Capacity In Medically Underserved Communities, Peter Shin, Sara J. Rosenbaum, Brian K. Bruen, Alice (Xiao-Xiao) Lu, Rachel Arguello, Jennifer Tolbert

Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications

Community health centers play an important role in providing care to uninsured and low-income individuals living in medically underserved communities. They rely on many different revenue sources and, over time, Medicaid has become a central source of funding for most health centers. To better understand how Medicaid influences health center practice, this paper compares the strength of health centers in states that have expanded Medicaid coverage for adults to health centers in states with more limited Medicaid coverage for adults. Differences between the two groups of health centers help shed light on the implications of broader Medicaid coverage for low-income …