Mississippi will allow earlier Medicaid for pregnant patients - Los Angeles Times
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Mississippi has the nation’s highest infant mortality. It will allow earlier Medicaid to help babies

Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves at a microphone.
Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves, a Republican, speaks last month at the Capitol in Jackson.
(Rogelio V. Solis / Associated Press)
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A new Mississippi law will allow earlier Medicaid coverage for pregnant women in an effort to improve health outcomes for mothers and babies in a poor state with the worst rate of infant mortality in the U.S.

The “presumptive eligibility†legislation signed Tuesday by Republican Gov. Tate Reeves will become law July 1. It says Medicaid will pay for a pregnant woman’s outpatient medical care for up to 60 days while her application for the government-funded insurance program is being considered.

Processing Medicaid applications can take weeks, and physicians say early prenatal care is vital.

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The advocacy group Mississippi Black Women’s Roundtable praised the new law, which passed the Republican-controlled Legislature with bipartisan support.

“This represents a significant step forward in the effort to create better health for women and their families,†the group said in a statement.

To spend a morning in the waiting room of The Women’s Clinic annex is to begin to understand a brutal truth of American life--why babies born in some parts of the rural South are no more likely to live to age 1 than babies born in Jamaica.

Black infants in Mississippi were nearly twice as likely as white infants to die over the last decade, according to a report released Jan. 18 by the state Department of Health.

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Presumptive Medicaid eligibility during pregnancy would be based on questions about income, asked by healthcare providers such as county health department workers. If a patient’s Medicaid application is ultimately rejected because her income is too high, Medicaid would still pay for services provided during the time of presumptive eligibility.

House Medicaid Committee Chair Missy McGee, a Republican from Hattiesburg, said the total cost to the Medicaid program will be slightly less than $600,000 a year.

About 41% of births in the U.S. and 57% in Mississippi were financed by Medicaid in 2022, according to health policy research group KFF. Only Louisiana had a larger share of births covered by Medicaid that year, at 61%.

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In Mississippi, Medicaid coverage for pregnant women 19 and older is based on income. A woman in that age category who has no dependents can receive up to about $29,000 and qualify for Medicaid during pregnancy. One with three dependents can get as much as $59,700 and qualify.

The public tends to blame homelessness on poverty, drug use, crime or even warm weather. But other cities don’t have L.A. levels of street homelessness because they have more available housing.

Mississippi Medicaid coverage is available to all income levels for those who are pregnant and younger than 19.

In 2023, Mississippi extended postpartum Medicaid coverage from two months to a full year, with Reeves saying the change was part of a “new pro-life agenda†to help mothers in a state where abortion is tightly restricted.

But Mississippi is among 10 states that have not expanded Medicaid eligibility to include people earning up to 138% of the federal poverty level, or $20,120 annually for a single person. Expansion is allowed under the federal health overhaul that then-President Obama signed into law in 2010.

The Mississippi House recently voted for Medicaid expansion. The state Senate has not voted on an expansion proposal this year, and Reeves has said for years that he opposes adding people to government programs.

Pettus writes for the Associated Press.

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