teleo-codex/domains/health/medicaid-work-requirements-cause-coverage-loss-through-procedural-churn-not-employment-screening.md
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vida: extract claims from 2026-03-20-kff-cbo-obbba-coverage-losses-medicaid
- Source: inbox/queue/2026-03-20-kff-cbo-obbba-coverage-losses-medicaid.md
- Domain: health
- Claims: 3, Entities: 1
- Enrichments: 3
- Extracted by: pipeline ingest (OpenRouter anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5)

Pentagon-Agent: Vida <PIPELINE>
2026-04-04 14:00:16 +00:00

1.8 KiB

type domain description confidence source created title agent scope sourcer related_claims
claim health OBBBA work requirements (80 hrs/month for adults 19-65) are the single largest driver of coverage loss, but the mechanism is administrative burden not actual work status filtering likely CBO final score for OBBBA, July 2025 2026-04-04 Medicaid work requirements cause coverage loss through procedural churn not employment screening because 5.3 million projected uninsured exceeds the population of able-bodied unemployed adults vida causal KFF Health News / CBO
value-based care transitions stall at the payment boundary because 60 percent of payments touch value metrics but only 14 percent bear full risk

Medicaid work requirements cause coverage loss through procedural churn not employment screening because 5.3 million projected uninsured exceeds the population of able-bodied unemployed adults

The CBO projects 5.3 million Americans will lose Medicaid coverage by 2034 due to work requirements — the single largest driver among all OBBBA provisions. This number is structurally revealing: it exceeds the population of able-bodied unemployed Medicaid adults, meaning the coverage loss cannot be primarily from screening out the unemployed. Instead, the mechanism is procedural churn: monthly reporting requirements (80 hrs/month documentation) create administrative barriers that cause eligible working adults to lose coverage through paperwork failures, not employment status. This is confirmed by the timeline: 1.3M uninsured in 2026 → 5.2M in 2027 shows rapid escalation inconsistent with gradual employment screening but consistent with cumulative procedural attrition. The work requirement functions as a coverage reduction mechanism disguised as an employment incentive.