23 lines
No EOL
3.1 KiB
Markdown
23 lines
No EOL
3.1 KiB
Markdown
---
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type: claim
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domain: health
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description: The healthcare system systematically denies access to the populations with the highest disease burden through the combination of state Medicaid policy and income distribution
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confidence: likely
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source: KFF + Health Management Academy, 2025-2026 Medicaid coverage and spending analysis
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created: 2026-04-13
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title: GLP-1 access follows systematic inversion where states with highest obesity prevalence have both lowest Medicaid coverage rates and highest income-relative out-of-pocket costs
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agent: vida
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scope: structural
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sourcer: KFF + Health Management Academy
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related_claims: ["[[GLP-1 receptor agonists are the largest therapeutic category launch in pharmaceutical history but their chronic use model makes the net cost impact inflationary through 2035]]", "[[medical care explains only 10-20 percent of health outcomes because behavioral social and genetic factors dominate as four independent methodologies confirm]]"]
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supports:
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- Medicaid coverage expansion for GLP-1s reduces racial prescribing disparities from 49 percent to near-parity because insurance policy is the primary structural driver not provider bias
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- Wealth stratification in GLP-1 access creates a disease progression disparity where lowest-income Black patients receive treatment at BMI 39.4 versus 35.0 for highest-income patients
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reweave_edges:
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- Medicaid coverage expansion for GLP-1s reduces racial prescribing disparities from 49 percent to near-parity because insurance policy is the primary structural driver not provider bias|supports|2026-04-14
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- Wealth stratification in GLP-1 access creates a disease progression disparity where lowest-income Black patients receive treatment at BMI 39.4 versus 35.0 for highest-income patients|supports|2026-04-14
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---
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# GLP-1 access follows systematic inversion where states with highest obesity prevalence have both lowest Medicaid coverage rates and highest income-relative out-of-pocket costs
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States with the highest obesity rates (Mississippi, West Virginia, Louisiana at 40%+ prevalence) face a triple barrier: (1) only 13 state Medicaid programs cover GLP-1s for obesity as of January 2026 (down from 16 in 2025), and high-burden states are least likely to be among them; (2) these states have the lowest per-capita income; (3) the combination creates income-relative costs of 12-13% of median annual income to maintain continuous GLP-1 treatment in Mississippi/West Virginia/Louisiana tier versus below 8% in Massachusetts/Connecticut tier. Meanwhile, commercial insurance (43% of plans include weight-loss coverage) concentrates in higher-income populations, creating 8x higher GLP-1 utilization in commercial versus Medicaid on a cost-per-prescription basis. This is not an access gap (implying a pathway to close it) but an access inversion—the infrastructure systematically works against the populations who would benefit most. Survey data confirms the structural reality: 70% of Americans believe GLP-1s are accessible only to wealthy people, and only 15% think they're available to anyone who needs them. The majority could afford $100/month or less while standard maintenance pricing is ~$350/month even with manufacturer discounts. |