The
Survey-in-Brief released today in Columbia, shows 54 percent of total
respondents backing the expansion of South Carolina’s Medicaid program to
provide health coverage for at least 329,000 uninsured state residents.
Medicaid is a joint federal-state government program designed to provide limited
health coverage to the poor. Until now, each state could set its own income
level for eligibility and the states were required to match federal funds – in
South Carolina on a 70/30 basis federal to state.
“Expanding
Medicaid will help our state’s workers who’ve lost their jobs or are struggling
in jobs without health benefits,” said Teresa Arnold, AARP South Carolina
legislative director. “For older workers
hit hardest by the recession and out of the workforce longer than younger
workers, this is especially important.” She added “Expanding Medicaid will give
people without insurance access to preventive care that can reduce the need for
expensive emergency room care, and ease emergency room overcrowding.”
Sixty-four
percent agree that the state should use a portion of the trust fund money from
the 2000 Tobacco Settlement in order to expand Medicaid in South Carolina. Under the Affordable Care Act, all states
will have the same income eligibility for Medicaid: 138% of the federal poverty
level, up to $15,000 income for an individual and $32,000 for a family of four.
To fund this, the federal government has allocated funds to each state to pay
100 percent of the expansion cost for the first few years, dropping to 90
percent by 2020.
“Hard
working South Carolinians need the security of affordable health care,” said
Arnold. This sentiment is shared by a
coalition of organizations and business groups who have formed the Accept ME SC
coalition to advocate for Medicaid expansion in South Carolina.
Currently,
Governors in twenty-five states, including Florida and New Jersey, are pursuing
Federal funding for their state Medicaid program.
The
AARP telephone survey, conducted February 13-21, 2013 by RDD Field Services,
recorded that 90 percent of the respondents had some type of health care
coverage and 92 percent have a positive voting behavior. Political views split at 43 percent
conservative; 31 percent moderate, 8 percent liberal and 19 percent other.
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Main Street | Suite 1280 | Columbia, SC 29201
Office:
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