| claim |
health |
The simultaneous removal of SNAP and Medicaid coverage reverses two parallel continuous-support interventions at the same time that evidence documents why continuous support is required for health outcomes |
experimental |
FRAC, Penn LDI, Urban Institute, Pew Charitable Trusts; CBO-scored $186B figure |
2026-04-08 |
OBBBA SNAP cuts represent the largest food assistance reduction in US history at $186 billion through 2034, removing continuous nutritional support from 2.4 million people despite evidence that SNAP participation reduces healthcare costs by 25 percent |
vida |
structural |
FRAC / Penn LDI / Urban Institute / Pew Charitable Trusts |
|
| SNAP benefit loss causes measurable mortality increases in under-65 populations through food insecurity pathways with peer-reviewed rate estimates of 2.9 percent excess deaths over 14 years |
|
| OBBBA SNAP cost-shifting to states creates a fiscal cascade where compliance with federal work requirements imposes $15 billion annual state costs, forcing states to cut additional health benefits to absorb the new burden |
|
| SNAP benefit loss causes measurable mortality increases in under-65 populations through food insecurity pathways with peer-reviewed rate estimates of 2.9 percent excess deaths over 14 years|supports|2026-04-10 |
| OBBBA SNAP cost-shifting to states creates a fiscal cascade where compliance with federal work requirements imposes $15 billion annual state costs, forcing states to cut additional health benefits to absorb the new burden|related|2026-04-10 |
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