
Report: Rural women of childbearing age more often rely on Medicaid
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A new report found women of childbearing age in rural areas rely more on Medicaid for health care coverage than their urban counterparts and cuts to Medicaid could threaten services.
The report by the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families found nearly a quarter of Virginia women in small towns and rural areas get health care through Medicaid. Republicans lawmakers are now considering a $625 billion cut to Medicaid, which many believe will eliminate health care for thousands in the Commonwealth. Virginia expanded Medicaid coverage in 2019 but any decrease in Medicaid funds automatically triggers the expansion to end.

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Joan Alker, executive director of the center, said cuts would threaten rural communities.
"Rural communities tend to have lower income than metro areas," Alker pointed out. "Medicaid, as important as it is for moms and babies nationwide, is even more important in rural areas and small towns."
Republican lawmakers have proposed the Medicaid cuts to redirect $4.5 trillion to other programs and tax cuts. Representative Mike Johnson, R-La., the Speaker of the House said Congress is addressing government waste and abuse.
Cuts to Medicaid could affect rural women not on Medicaid, too. One study showed rural hospitals are at least 60 percent more likely to remain open in states that have expanded Medicaid. In Virginia, only eight rural hospitals have labor and delivery units.
Victoria Richardson, staff attorney for the Virginia Poverty Law Center, said rural hospitals depend on Medicaid coverage to keep their doors open.
"It's important to keep those hospitals open, not just for women covered under Medicaid but also for pregnant women in general," Richardson contended. "If a hospital closes, that affects everybody in the community, no matter what source of coverage you have."
A poll by The Associated Press and NORC Center for Public Affairs Research found 55 percent of U.S. adultsbelieve the government is spending too little on Medicaid, compared to 15 percent who believe it is spending too much.