‘The life and breath of communities’: Hospital leaders say Medicaid expansion still needed

Gov. Tate Reeves’ Medicaid payment changes, pitched during the eleventh-hour of a heated reelection campaign and his only major health plan during his first four years as governor, delivered $658.2 million to hospitals in January.

Hospital leaders say the influx of federal money is a lifeline, but it’s not enough to forgo Medicaid expansion – a long-term solution that would insure hundreds of thousands of working poor people in one of the country’s sickest states.

Quentin Whitwell owns four hospitals in rural Mississippi. He knows intimately the struggles they face. While the extra federal money Reeves secured is helpful, he said, expansion would go further.

“There is no reason to leave funding on the table to assist rural hospitals that are the life and breath of communities,” he said.

As Mississippi hospitals continue to struggle, expanding Medicaid to cover the working poor has been hotly contested over the last decade, most openly during the last two gubernatorial elections. Reeves, as did two of his GOP predecessors, has remained steadfastly opposed, saying it would make Mississippians more reliant on “welfare.”

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