PRINCETON—The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation issued the following statement in response to reports that the U.S. Department of Justice instructed several U.S. attorneys to draft plans to investigate ...
PRINCETON—The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) Board of Trustees announced today that it has elected two new Trustees, Kelley Hall, MBA, and Patricia Miller Zollar, MBA, effective October 22, ...
A just society is built on an inclusive economy that allows everyone to pursue the dreams they have for themselves and their families. Only by closing the racial wealth gap and putting economic ...
PRINCETON—The White House yesterday fired CDC Director Susan Monarez after she refused to change vaccine policies and dismiss several members of her senior staff. Her firing led to the resignation of ...
Healthcare spending in the United States would decline by $797 billion over the next decade—with more than one-third of the decline occurring in California, Florida, Texas, and New York—under the ...
One in three adults who work or attend school while enrolled in Medicaid expansion coverage would still be at risk of losing coverage under work requirements in the House-passed 2025 budget bill.
Healthcare providers would lose more than $770 billion in revenue over the next decade under the congressional spending bill passed by the House of Representatives. In addition to lost revenue, the ...
Thousands of people in each state that expanded Medicaid could lose health coverage next year under a federal Medicaid work requirement. Most people who would be affected already work or are disabled, ...
Earlier this year, we reaffirmed our commitment to dismantling the biggest barrier to health in America: structural racism. In support of this mission, we’ve been working across the Foundation to ...
More than 5 million adults could lose Medicaid coverage in 2026 if Congress enacts a work requirement in states that expanded their Medicaid programs. Researchers analyze policy proposals that would ...
Cutting federal Medicaid spending by capping how much money the federal government provides states per enrollee—along with eliminating the enhanced federal matching rate—would shift hundreds of ...
Although 41 states have expanded eligibility for Medicaid coverage as part of the Affordable Care Act, a study shows that coverage could be in jeopardy for millions of people if federal funding to ...