Eliminating Gaps in Medicaid Coverage During Reentry After Incarceration

Author:

Albertson Elaine Michelle1,Scannell Christopher1,Ashtari Neda1,Barnert Elizabeth1

Affiliation:

1. Elaine Michelle Albertson is with the Jonathan and Karin Fielding School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles. Christopher Scannell is with the VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System and the National Clinician Scholars Program, University of California, Los Angeles. Neda Ashtari and Elizabeth Barnert are with the David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles.

Abstract

This commentary explores the health and social challenges associated with gaps in Medicaid health insurance coverage for adults and youths exiting the US criminal justice system, and highlights some potential solutions. Because a high proportion of recently incarcerated people come from low-income backgrounds and experience a high burden of disease, the Medicaid program plays an important role in ensuring access to care for this population. However, the Medicaid Inmate Exclusion Policy, or “inmate exclusion,” leads to Medicaid being terminated or suspended upon incarceration, often resulting in gaps in Medicaid coverage at release. These coverage gaps interact with individual-level and population-level factors to influence key health and social outcomes associated with recidivism. Ensuring Medicaid coverage upon release is an important, feasible component of structural change to alleviate health inequities and reduce recidivism. High-yield opportunities to ensure continuous coverage exist at the time of Medicaid suspension or termination and during incarceration prior to release.

Publisher

American Public Health Association

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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