Colorado Medicaid recipient fears losing coverage
Digest more
Jamie Vigil fears the impact that Medicaid cuts in Trump's "big, beautiful bill' will have on her ability to obtain skin cancer treatment.
Leaders of a trade association that represents 21 community health centers across Colorado, including Peak Vista in Colorado Springs, are “still reeling” from last Thursday’s full Congressional approval of H.
Fair Share America is travelling across the country speaking out against the Federal Budget Reconciliation Bill, better known as the “Big Beautiful Bill,” which was recently signed into law.
President Donald Trump’s "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" is now law. So when does it take effect? Here's a look at when its provisions start.
Florida did not expand Medicaid as most states did, so the impact may be lesser than other places, but reductions loom.
Like a lot of people who rely on Medicaid, Jamie Vigil has a lot of questions about what the, “One Big Beautiful Bill,” becoming law will mean for her.
The health policy nonprofit KFF estimated between 120,000 and 190,000 people in Colorado could lose their insurance, mostly through falling off the Medicaid rolls, over the next 10 years.