Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Georgia removes another 95,000 adults and kids from state insurance rolls

Changes from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services could affect how some hospitals operate.
David Sacks
/
Getty Images
Changes from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services could affect how some hospitals operate.

Georgia has removed another 95,000 adults and kids from state insurance rolls as it continues to review who is eligible for coverage now that the federal government has ended a pandemic public health emergency.

The removals from Medicaid and Children's Health Insurance represent a little under half of the roughly 217,000 people who were due for renewal in June, the Georgia Department of Community Health said in a news release. The agency is still reviewing the eligibility of about 57,000 of those people. They will remain insured while the review is pending. The other 64,000 people were renewed. Federal law prohibited states from removing people from Medicaid during the COVID-19 public health emergency, which started in early 2020 and ended this May.

States received extra federal money to cover the expenses.

Jeff has delivered morning news at WUGA Radio for more than a decade. He was among a team at CNN that won a George Foster Peabody Award in 1991 for an educational product based on the fall of the Soviet Union. He also won an Edward R. Murrow Award from Radio Television Digital News Association in 2007 for producing a series for WSB Radio on financial scams. Jeff is a graduate of the Babcock Graduate School of Management at Wake Forest University (MBA) and holds a BS in Business Administration from Campbell University, both in North Carolina.