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The COVID-19 public health emergency allowed people enrolled in Medicaid to stay enrolled. But as the expiration date for that emergency looms many states are planning for big changes in Medicaid–including New Mexico.
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The White House along with state politicians announced Thursday that New Mexico, along with Minnesota, Maine and Washington DC, would extend post-birth Medicaid coverage from two months to one year after birth.
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Latino youth are feeling psychological impacts of the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown, researchers say. A committee of legislators in New…
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The 10-year census count will begin next year. But there’s plenty about it that might make some folks nervous in New Mexico. Just last week, the Census…
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The United States Census Bureau has found that the national number of people who are uninsured increased significantly last year. This marks the first…
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The Trump administration has issued a new rule that could deny visas and green cards to some immigrants if they use government assistance programs like…
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People who apply for food and medical assistance programs in New Mexico got used to long waits, mysterious denials, and catch-22s of bureaucracy. But…
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The central question in a two-decade federal court case is whether New Mexico’s Human Services Department is distributing SNAP and Medicaid fast enough…
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For years, there’s been a fight in court about whether the state of New Mexico is following federal law when it comes to distributing food and medical…
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The Affordable Care Act says health insurers can’t deny coverage for someone or charge them more if they have a pre-existing condition.State senators…