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Investigations

Despite warnings, Texas rushed to remove millions from Medicaid. Eligible residents lost care.

Texas officials acknowledged some errors after they stripped Medicaid coverage from more than 2 million people, most of them children. A ProPublica and Texas Tribune review of records shows that these mistakes and others were preventable.

By Eleanor Klibanoff, The Texas Tribune, and Lomi Kriel, The Texas Tribune and ProPublica
Micaela Hoops with her children at their home in Sherman, Texas. Hoops’ three sons lost insurance after she misunderstood the state’s deadline and failed to submit their renewal for the first time in three years. When the North Texas mother discovered her error, she frantically reapplied, putting her children at the back of an ever-lengthening waitlist.

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Ignored warnings

“A one-two punch”

Hoops sifts through paperwork from the Texas Health and Human Services Commission at her home in Sherman, Texas.
Coverage for Hoops’ children wasn’t restored until more than 100 days after she reapplied.

Federal investigation

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Health care Politics State government Greg Abbott Investigations Medicaid