Medicaid work requirements delayed until 2027 following federal action
Other parts of Indiana’s HIP 3.0 proposal are still under consideration, including an expansion on provider taxes, cost-sharing requirements and wellness incentives.
Other parts of Indiana’s HIP 3.0 proposal are still under consideration, including an expansion on provider taxes, cost-sharing requirements and wellness incentives.
Hospital leaders who spoke with Inside INdiana Business emphasized the bill wouldn’t increase funding, it would give hospitals access to funding that’s already been allocated.
GeoH offers a software platform that home care agencies can use for things like billing, staff scheduling, payroll and analytics, as well as a handful of other services.
As dozens of GOP legislators talked with Trump officials about a variety of topics, Democrat lawmakers called out their colleagues and Hoosiers gathered to protest the maneuver.
At the 5,000-square-foot Roche Community Garden, Roche employees grow tomatoes, strawberries, watermelons and a variety of peppers to be provided to low-income patients.
The complaint alleges the Indianapolis-based drugmaker offered illegal incentives to influence Texas providers to prescribe Lilly medications including Zepbound and Mounjaro.
Where else in the nation would Trump bring his climate-denier corncob caucus but Indiana?
Over the course of a decade, Indiana’s per-enrollee costs for certain Medicaid recipients are expected to surge by 43% and 72% for lower-income and elderly Hoosiers, respectively.
The Indianapolis-based pharmaceutical giant released its second-quarter earnings Thursday along with data from the latest studies of its weight-loss pill, orforglipron.
The expansion is both gratifying and sad.
And this June, Goodwill of Central & Southern Indiana and Goodwill Industries of Central Illinois announced plans to merge.
Why is there no sense of urgency in our Legislature?
Assisting low-income individuals in obtaining health insurance is essential.
Voters told us we were being hyperbolic and that our American democracy will hold.
The $54.6 billion budget, approved in May, spends 3% more than its 2023 predecessor. But the state’s spending power has sunk 5% since then.
Reserves will be 11.2% of Indiana’s spending, at the lower end of the 10-15% recommended to maintain Indiana’s AAA bond rating.
Some of the biggest funding reductions in the bill—like Medicaid reform—will be phased in, meaning it won’t immediately hit Indiana’s coffers.
The medications still amount to around $500 per month for those without insurance—out of reach for many patients. And even for people with insurance, coverage remains uneven.
Indiana’s wealthiest families will get funding for their children’s private-school tuition while our less-fortunate families struggle to afford preschool.
The Indiana Legislative Council on Wednesday approved the nearly two dozen topics that lawmakers will examine in interim study committees through the end of October.