Medicaid, the main health insurance program for low-income people and the single largest source of public coverage in the U.S., turns 50 this year. In that time, it has grown to cover nearly 70 million Americans and become a key source of financing for safety net hospitals and health centers, as well as the main source of coverage and financing of long-term care. The program continues to be a focus of policy debate and partisan differences.
On Wednesday, May 6, at 3 p.m. ET, the Kaiser Family Foundation will hold a public event in its Washington, D.C. offices to reflect on the lessons of the first 50 years of Medicaid and to consider what is ahead for the program and the people it serves. At the event we will release a new report on Medicaid at 50 from the Foundation’s Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured (KCMU), and will host two panel discussions involving Foundation researchers and other distinguished experts.
Drew Altman, President and CEO of the Foundation, will provide opening remarks. James R. Tallon, Jr., Chairman of the KCMU and President of the United Hospital Fund, will moderate the event, which will also feature Diane Rowland, Executive Vice President of the Foundation and Executive Director of the KCMU, and Barbara Lyons, Senior Vice President of the Foundation and Director of the KCMU.
One panel discussion, on Medicaid’s role for people across the nation, will trace Medicaid’s evolution and examine the program’s impact on the uninsured and on racial disparities in health coverage and care, as well as its role as a source of coverage for low-income families, the elderly and people with disabilities. A second panel will look at Medicaid’s role in the health care system, with a focus on Medicaid’s coverage of health and long-term services and supports. Both panels will address the program’s role today and key policy debates, opportunities and challenges ahead.
Confirmed participants include:
*reception to follow in the main lobby