About 25.1 million people have been disenrolled from Medicaid as of Aug. 23, according to new data from KFF.
KFF has been tracking Medicaid enrollment since May 3, 2023, after the continuous enrollment requirement enacted during the COVID-19 pandemic ended March 31, 2023. The tracker uses information from state websites and CMS.
About 24.8 million people had been disenrolled as of Aug 1.
Ten notes for ASC leaders:
1. More than 94 million people were enrolled in Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program in March 2023.
2. KFF estimated last year that between 7.8 million and 24.4 million people could lose Medicaid coverage during the 12-month unwinding period.
3. Approximately 54.9 million people have had their coverage renewed so far.
4. There are still renewals waiting for 14.1 million people.
5. KFF noted that its dashboard undercounts the actual number of disenrollments to date due to delays for when states report data.
6. Texas has disenrolled 2.5 million people so far, the most of any state.
7. California has renewed coverage for 8.7 million people, the most of any state.
8. Across all states with available data, 69% of all people disenrolled had their coverage terminated for procedural reasons, which can include people who did not complete the renewal process.
9. Of those who had their coverage renewed, 61% of people were renewed on an ex parte basis.
10. Medicaid and CHIP enrollment has declined by 14.8% nationwide since the unwinding process began.