Titles
- Implications of work requirements in Medicaid: what does the data say?1
- In support of family caregivers: a snapshot of five states1
- In their own voices: low-income women and their health providers in three communities talk about access to care, reproductive health, and immigration1
- Insurance market reform: 1
- Integrating community health workers into state and local chronic disease prevention efforts: program and financing considerations1
- Kansas Medicaid Fraud Control Unit: 2018 onsite inspection1
- Kentucky State Medicaid Fraud Control Unit: 2017 onsite review1
- Left behind in California: comparing community paramedicine policies across states1
- Lessons learned from payer-provider partnerships for community-based palliative care1
- Leveraging 1332 state innovation waivers to stabilize individual health insurance markets: experiences of Alaska, Minnesota, and Oregon : final report : document efforts to stabilize the individual market using state-based reinsurance1
- Listening to Mothers in California: results from a population-based survey of women's childbearing experiences1
- Listening to Trump voters with ACA coverage: what they want in a health care plan1
- Low-Income Californians and health care: selected findings from the Kaiser Family Foundation/California Health Care Foundation California Health Policy Survey1
- Low-income families with children will be harmed by South Carolina's proposed Medicaid work reporting requirement1
- Making quality matter in Medi-Cal managed care: how other states hold health plans financially accountable for performance1
- Making the case for prevention: why Washington's Accountable Communities of Health should pursue Domain 3D chronic disease prevention projects1
- Many Medicaid-enrolled children who were treated for ADHD did not receive recommended followup care1
- Many adults targeted by Medicaid work requirements face barriers to sustained employment1
- Medi-Cal and behavioral health services1
- Medi-Cal moves addiction treatment into the mainstream: early lessons from the Drug Medi-Cal Organized Delivery System pilots1