The House-passed reconciliation bill is garnering new scrutiny as analysts calculate the ripple effects the proposed cuts on Medicaid, Medicare, and Affordable Care Act (ACA) access will have across the entire health care system. This includes estimates of millions of people losing their health coverage, tens of thousands losing their lives, billions of dollars shifted to state budgets, worsening the direct care workforce crisis, and damage to the health care system’s infrastructure, including closures of hospitals, nursing facilities, assisted living facilities, and more.
Terminating Coverage for Millions
As we have previously covered, the most obvious health care pieces in the budget bill would terminate coverage for nearly 11 million people through Medicaid cuts, plus additional millions through failure to extend ACA tax credits. Together, this would increase the number of uninsured by 50%, to approximately 16 million people.
Most of these losses take the form of punitive red tape that denies eligible people access to the care they need and qualify for, forcing them to complete endless paperwork and income verification, or punishing them for job loss, illness, disability, or caregiving.
Other provisions would strip the power from states to provide coverage to immigrants using state-only funds by taking away Medicaid dollars.
The red tape burdens would affect millions of people with Medicare who need help paying for Medicare premiums and cost sharing. They would have to jump through hoops to get and keep Medicaid and Medicare Savings Program assistance, as well as their enrollment in the lifesaving Part D Low Income Subsidy (LIS) program.
Driving Up Costs of Coverage and Care for Everyone
As bad as the direct coverage losses are, they are not the whole story. The repercussions of people going without health insurance will ripple throughout the health care system. The National Association of Insurance Commissioners decries the changes that will result from fewer people having coverage, changes to insurance risk pools, and providers going uncompensated for care: “Policy changes embedded in the House-passed reconciliation legislation would have a significant and ongoing negative impact on the health insurance markets we regulate and the health care system as a whole…. With fewer people covered by Medicaid and private insurance, we expect the legislation to result in more uncompensated care for health care providers and higher costs for those remaining in the market.”
The repercussions of people going without health insurance will ripple throughout the health care system.
These projections echo other analyses that predict providers would lose $1 trillion from these cuts, with $408 billion of that amount coming from hospitals. In addition, providers would see an increase of nearly $300 billion in uncompensated care, as millions find themselves without coverage.
Shifting Costs to States Will Lead to Older Adults and People with Disabilities Losing Vital Services
The ripple effects would not stop there. The bill would shift billions of dollars in costs to state budgets in both health care and food assistance.
Cuts to federal Medicaid funding force states to carry more of the burden, and one CBO letter clearly lays out the state options: “1. Spend more state funds using a mix of revenue increases and reduced spending on other programs for financing; 2. Reduce payment rates to health care providers; 3. Limit the scope or amount of optional benefits, and; 4. Reduce enrollment in Medicaid.” Ultimately, the result will be the same: The cuts will force states to trim expenses in Medicaid or other vital programs and services and leave many people unable to meet basic needs.
The cuts will force states to trim expenses in Medicaid or other vital programs and services and leave many people unable to meet basic needs.
The cuts in the bill will put even more pressure on an imperiled health care workforce, especially direct care workers who assist older adults and people with disabilities in many facilities and home care settings. These workers are often very low-wage workers who rely on Medicaid for their own coverage. Experts in this space foresee a cascading crisis as providers lose revenue and more care workers leave the market as their job quality worsens: “Facing a shortage of direct care workers, family members—disproportionately women—will be forced to cut their hours or leave their jobs entirely to care for loved ones.”
Hospitals, Especially in Rural Areas, in Danger
Rural hospitals are already on the brink in many areas, especially in the 10 states that have not expanded access to Medicaid. Increased uncompensated care costs from patients without coverage and with no ability to pay will only drive these hospitals closer to closure. The American Hospital Association puts it bluntly: “Hospitals—especially in rural and underserved areas—will be forced to make difficult decisions about whether they will have to reduce services, reduce staff and potentially consider closing their doors.”
Though the cuts in the package may seem contained and targeted to lower-income Americans, this legislation poses dangers to the health, lives, economic stability, and quality of life of everyone in the United States who will ever need health care or insurance coverage.
This legislation poses dangers to the health, lives, economic stability, and quality of life of everyone in the United States who will ever need health care or insurance coverage.
Tell Your Senators: No Cuts to Care
The Senate is currently discussing next steps, with the goal of passing a bill this month. Recent reports indicate they may be considering even deeper cuts to health care programs, including Medicare. Your senators need to hear that you oppose the House-passed bill and any rollbacks to programs on which older adults and people with disabilities rely. Contact them today!
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My son had his services cut more than half leaving him only with a few hours a day with support services
Down to 189 hours for caregiving and community inclusion
20 a week for community inclusion and 3 hours for home care
He has autism and fragile x syndrome
Hardly leaving money for me to pay mortgage and utilities
I am supposed to clock in intermittently but cannot leave to work another job at age 69
Great life working 12/7 days and only an hour break a week
Mystified in how to do this Ada single person who cannot afford to put ex in jail for not paying!
This whole article is an attempt to scare people when, in truth, payments need to restricted and eligibility needs to be supported by facts and standards. Medicaid spending and the ACA have been out of control for awhile. Anyone who can prove their eligibility will get it. And the whole caretaker payments are another area of financial abuse. Glad the abuse is finally getting reined in
This must be part of the Fraud, Waste, and Abuse the Administration is fighting.
I look forward to reading the report if it is released to the public. I want to see the evidence for any drastic cuts.
If the government wants to enhance Medicare and cut prescription costs, the pharmacy branch managers (PBM’s) have to go. There are simply too many “managers” sucking on the medicare “teat” and bleeding it dry. PBM’s have put independent pharmacies out of business. Prescription advertising in the media should have never been allowed. Think of how much health care could be improved in the USA if the drug advertising money was diverted to real health care. $1300 for 40 days of Ozempic and co pay of $192? And count the Ozempic ads on TV…’nuff said?
Robert Fritz JR
June 6, 2025 at 1:45 am
Sadly, the facts given in this article is not meant to scare people but inform them as to what most likely will happen if this bill is passed. States are already saying similar things, if their share of federal funding is reduced, they will have to restrict the number of people eligible, reduce other services to cover the reduced payments to them. As is the case with even regular insurance, coverage has for years reduced the insurance companies share of costs making their clients pick up higher copays. Patients are bearing the increased costs of prescriptions, hospital er costs/stays as well medical tests etc. No, this article isn’t to scare people but to honestly present the what ifs, cans, and wills of the effects of the cuts to Medicaid, Medicare and the ACA.
Red tape is difficult for our poorest. People are trying to fly using Costco Cards as proof of identity. These are folks who don’t need driver’s licenses or a passport.It’s an extreme example but stating we need more proof is as helpful as saying we shouldn’t have a felon as president.
It sounds like the Nazi party has taken over the Republican party where only the wealthiest people survive and the poor are destroyed one day at a time!!!!
If the government wants to enhance Medicare and cut prescription costs, the pharmacy branch managers (PBM’s) have to go. There are simply too many “managers” sucking on the medicare “teat” and bleeding it dry. PBM’s have put independent pharmacies out of business. Prescription advertising in the media should have never been allowed. Think of how much health care could be improved in the USA if the drug advertising money was diverted to real health care. $1300 for 40 days of Ozempic and co pay of $192? And count the Ozempic ads on TV…’nuff said?
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13 Comments on “A Whirlwind of Damage from Republican Budget: Increased Costs for All, Hospitals and Lives at Risk”
Edward Marshall
June 5, 2025 at 5:53 pmBless you for this amazing article. Because of you, we now know what is about to happen and why we must fight like hell.
See the Truth People
June 5, 2025 at 7:11 pm👍🏻
My son had his services cut more than half leaving him only with a few hours a day with support services
Down to 189 hours for caregiving and community inclusion
20 a week for community inclusion and 3 hours for home care
He has autism and fragile x syndrome
Hardly leaving money for me to pay mortgage and utilities
I am supposed to clock in intermittently but cannot leave to work another job at age 69
Great life working 12/7 days and only an hour break a week
Mystified in how to do this Ada single person who cannot afford to put ex in jail for not paying!
Tana Page
June 5, 2025 at 9:22 pmAmen!
Wendy
June 5, 2025 at 6:04 pmThis whole article is an attempt to scare people when, in truth, payments need to restricted and eligibility needs to be supported by facts and standards. Medicaid spending and the ACA have been out of control for awhile. Anyone who can prove their eligibility will get it. And the whole caretaker payments are another area of financial abuse. Glad the abuse is finally getting reined in
Mark Barrow
June 5, 2025 at 9:35 pmThis must be part of the Fraud, Waste, and Abuse the Administration is fighting.
I look forward to reading the report if it is released to the public. I want to see the evidence for any drastic cuts.
R M
June 9, 2025 at 8:47 amIf the government wants to enhance Medicare and cut prescription costs, the pharmacy branch managers (PBM’s) have to go. There are simply too many “managers” sucking on the medicare “teat” and bleeding it dry. PBM’s have put independent pharmacies out of business. Prescription advertising in the media should have never been allowed. Think of how much health care could be improved in the USA if the drug advertising money was diverted to real health care. $1300 for 40 days of Ozempic and co pay of $192? And count the Ozempic ads on TV…’nuff said?
Robert Fritz JR
June 6, 2025 at 1:45 amSadly, the facts given in this article is not meant to scare people but inform them as to what most likely will happen if this bill is passed. States are already saying similar things, if their share of federal funding is reduced, they will have to restrict the number of people eligible, reduce other services to cover the reduced payments to them. As is the case with even regular insurance, coverage has for years reduced the insurance companies share of costs making their clients pick up higher copays. Patients are bearing the increased costs of prescriptions, hospital er costs/stays as well medical tests etc. No, this article isn’t to scare people but to honestly present the what ifs, cans, and wills of the effects of the cuts to Medicaid, Medicare and the ACA.
Carl Cutrone
June 9, 2025 at 12:48 pmTrue!
Carl Cutrone
June 9, 2025 at 12:47 pmRed tape is difficult for our poorest. People are trying to fly using Costco Cards as proof of identity. These are folks who don’t need driver’s licenses or a passport.It’s an extreme example but stating we need more proof is as helpful as saying we shouldn’t have a felon as president.
Justin Thomas
June 10, 2025 at 3:28 pmThank you for seeing through the BS. Just another scare tactic by the Dems.
Diane Dillon
June 5, 2025 at 6:27 pmNo cuts to care!
gerald Eugene Mantonya
June 6, 2025 at 1:06 amIt sounds like the Nazi party has taken over the Republican party where only the wealthiest people survive and the poor are destroyed one day at a time!!!!
R M
June 9, 2025 at 8:48 amIf the government wants to enhance Medicare and cut prescription costs, the pharmacy branch managers (PBM’s) have to go. There are simply too many “managers” sucking on the medicare “teat” and bleeding it dry. PBM’s have put independent pharmacies out of business. Prescription advertising in the media should have never been allowed. Think of how much health care could be improved in the USA if the drug advertising money was diverted to real health care. $1300 for 40 days of Ozempic and co pay of $192? And count the Ozempic ads on TV…’nuff said?