Mississippi
Medicare, Medicaid numbers: How many people use federal health insurance in Mississippi?
Some Senate Republicans want changes to House GOP budget plan
Some Senate Republicans have expressed concerns over cuts to Medicaid and are demanding changes.
Medicaid could face cuts as Congress looks to develop a new budget. The program benefits the elderly, children, people with disabilities and adults. Do you know what government health care spending looks like in your community? How many people in Mississippi depend on the program?
The U.S. House of Representatives recently passed a budget resolution that would extend President Donald Trump’s 2017 tax cuts and plans for $4.5 trillion in tax cuts over a decade.
Trump reportedly said he doesn’t want cuts to Medicare, which insures people 65 and older and those with disabilities.
Experts have expressed concern changes could be coming to programs like Medicaid, which insures about one in five Americans.
According to KFF, about 24% of the Mississippi population is covered by Medicaid or the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP). In fiscal year 2022, Medicaid spending was $6.3 billion in the state, and the federal government paid 82.5% of costs.
Here’s what we know about how many people get health insurance from the government in Mississippi, including Medicare, Medicaid and CHIP and how the programs affect Mississippi families.
How many Mississippi residents get Medicare?
According to KFF, Mississippi had almost 637,000 Medicare beneficiaries in 2024. The federal health insurance program helps seniors 65 and older and adults with long-term disabilities. Most in Mississippi, 57.1% are enrolled in traditional Medicare, and about 43% are in Medicare Advantage.
Approximately 503,000 get Part D coverage, which limits prescription drug costs to $2,000 out of pocket. The Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 also caps insulin costs at $35 for Medicare recipients, starting in 2023.
How many people in Mississippi are on Medicaid and CHIP?
According to KFF, about 642,000 people in Mississippi got health care via Medicaid and CHIP as of August 2024.
By the numbers, that looks like:
- One in seven adults aged 19-64.
- One in two kids.
- Three in four nursing home residents.
- Two in seven Medicare recipients.
- Three in eight people with disabilities.
About 64% of non-elderly Medicaid enrollees in the state are non-white.
What about work requirements?
Some conservatives have suggested adding a work requirement to the federal program.
The move failed to gain enough traction in Trump’s last term, and opponents said the move fails to realize significant savings. They argue it adds to administrative costs while paperwork requirements trip up and strip benefits from qualified recipients.
Some states have implemented the plan.
Jennifer Tolbert, deputy director of the KFF program on Medicaid and the uninsured, told USA TODAY that Mississippi is among the states that have asked the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services for the OK to launch a Medicaid work program.
More than half of adult Medicaid recipients in Mississippi — 62% — are working, per KFF. Forty percent of the state is defined as low income, and about 15.2% of adults in Mississippi reported having medical debt, almost twice the national average of 8.6%.
Where does Medicaid spending in Mississippi go?
According to KFF, adults and children make up 65% of the state’s Medicaid enrollment and account for 34% of spending. Elderly people and those with disabilities make up 35% of Mississippi enrollment but account for 66% of expenditures.
The main Medicaid spending in Mississippi goes to:
- Managed care: 43%.
- Long-term care: 28%.
- Acute care: 20%
- Medicare payments: 6%.
- Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) payments: 4%.
Health Insurance: Who’s covered and who’s not
Did Mississippi adopt Medicaid expansion?
No. Forty states and the District of Columbia have adopted and implemented the Affordable Care Act’s Medicaid expansion, but Mississippi is not one of them.
The measure died last year in the Mississippi Legislature, despite work to expand healthcare to about 200,00 of the state’s working poor. The likelihood that Medicaid expansion might pass in 2025 currently looks slim.
Expansion allows adults with income up to 138% of the poverty line to get coverage.
According to KFF, the state currently pays 23 cents of each dollar spent on Medicaid, with the federal government booting 77% of costs.
The state, KFF said, would drop its share to 10 cents of every dollar spent if it adopts the expansion and potentially see $400 million in two years in American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (ARPA) funds.
The future of the expansion, however, is unclear amid current federal budget talks.
Leadership in the Mississippi Legislature has reportedly agreed to keep “dummy bills” alive in the House and Senate while the issue is debated by the GOP-led Congress and in the White House.
Medicare vs. Medicaid: Key differences in the government-run programs
Medicare and Medicaid both are government-run health insurance programs but there are several key differences between the two.
How does Medicaid affect families?
More than half of births in the state, 57%, are covered by Medicaid, and Mississippi is part of the 12-month postpartum coverage extension.
About 20% of women aged 15-49 in Mississippi are insured through Medicaid.
Parents must have an income less than 27% of the federal poverty level to keep Medicaid after pregnancy coverage ends in Mississippi. (That amount is set by the Department of Health and Human Services and depends on the number of people in the home.)
Last year, a report from the Commonwealth Fund, a nonpartisan foundation focused on health care policy, ranked Mississippi last in women’s health and reproductive care. The state scored low overall because of lack of access to care — particularly in the Delta area — a statewide abortion ban and the lack of Medicaid expansion.
Mississippi’s infant mortality rate per 100,000 people is also high at 9.1, compared to 5.6 for the U.S.
Contributing: Pam Dankins, Grant McLaughlin, Sudiksha Kochi, Savannah Kuchar, Ken Alltucker, Riley Beggin
Bonnie Bolden is the Deep South Connect reporter for Mississippi with Gannett/USA Today. Email her at bbolden@gannett.com.
Mississippi
Thompson defeats Turnage to highlight U.S. House primaries in Mississippi – SuperTalk Mississippi
Political newcomer and Capitol Hill attorney Evan Turnage proved no match for longtime U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson, who defeated him and one other challenger to earn the Democratic nomination for Mississippi’s 2nd Congressional District on Tuesday.
Some politicos thought Turnage – who went to Yale and later worked for some of Thompson’s Democratic colleagues, including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) – wouldn’t necessarily win but could make waves as one of the more viable candidates to challenge Thompson in recent years. However, that wasn’t the case as Thompson garnered approximately 85% of the vote when the race was called.

Thompson, 78, is seeking an 18th term. The civil rights leader who chaired the Jan. 6 Committee was first elected in 1993 and serves as a ranking member on the House Homeland Security Committee. He will face either Ron Eller or Kevin Wilson on the Republican side, a race yet to be called as of late Tuesday night, and independent Bennie Foster in November’s general.
All of Mississippi’s U.S. House seats are up for grabs this year.
In the 1st Congressional District, Republican Rep. Trent Kelly ran unopposed, while civil rights attorney and University of Mississippi School of Law professor Cliff Johnson beat former state lawmaker Kelvin Buck in the Democratic primary. Libertarian challenger Johnny Baucom awaits Kelly and Johnson in the general.
In the 3rd Congressional District, both Republican Rep. Michael Guest and Democrat Michael Chiaradio ran unopposed. They will meet Libertarian Erik Kiehle in the general.
In the 4th Congressional District, Republican Rep. Mike Ezell had over 80% of the vote when his race was called against former Mississippi Department of Marine Resources officer and political staffer Sawyer Walters. State Rep. Jeffrey Hulum easily won the Democratic nomination over Paul Blackman and D. Ryan Grover. Ezell and Hulum will face independent Carl Boyanton in the general.
Arguably the most watched races of the night occurred in the state’s lone U.S. Senate seat in this year’s cycle. Republican Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith had no problem with Ocean Springs doctor Sarah Adlakha, seeing her name bolded around 30 minutes after the polls closed. It wasn’t long after that when Lowndes County District Attorney Scott Colom was announced the winner of the Democratic primary over Priscilla Till and Albert Littell. Independent Ty Pinkins will meet Hyde-Smith and Colom in the general on Nov. 3.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Mississippi
Mississippi First Congressional District Primary 2026: Live Election Results, Buck vs. Johnson
Mississippi
Mississippi Top Reads for week of March 15, 2026
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Staff
Sunday, March 15, 2026
1. (tie) “The Irish Goodbye,” Beth Ann Fennelly, Norton; and “Vigil,” George Saunders, Random House
2. “Theo of Golden,” Allen Levi, Atria Books
3. “The Widow,” John Grisham, Doubleday
4. “The Correspondent,” Virginia Evans, Random House
5. “When It’s Darkness on the Delta,” W. Ralph Eubanks, Beacon Press
6. “Eradication,” Jonathan Miles, Doubleday
7. “Neptune’s Fortune,” Julian Sancton, Random House
8. “The Dean,” Sparky Reardon, The Nautilus Publishing Company
9. “Kin,” Tayari Jones, Random House
10. “Brawler,” Lauren Groff, Riverhead
Children and young adults
1. “The Bear and the Hair and the Fair,” Em Lynas, Little Brown
2. “The Hybrid Prince,” Tui T. Sutherland, Scholastic Press
3. “One Mississippi,” Steve Azar,Sarah Frances Hardy (Illustrator), The Nautilus Publishing
4. “If You Make a Call on a Banana Phone,” Gideon Sterer, HarperCollins
5. (tie) “Fancy Nancy: Besties for Eternity,” Jane O’Connor and Robin Preiss Glasser (Illustrator), HarperCollins; and “The Dark is For,” Jane Kohuth, Simon and Schuster
Adult events (Sunday, March 15–Saturday, March 21)
Amy McDowell in conversation with Jodi Skipper for “Whispers in the Pews,” 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, Off Square Books, 129 Courthouse Square, Oxford, 662-236-2262
Tayari Jones on Thacker Mountain Radio Hour for “Kin,” 6 p.m. Thursday, Off Square Books, 129 Courthouse Square, Oxford, 662-236-2262
Children’s events (Sunday, March 15–Saturday, March 21)
No Cap Book Club (kids 10-13) will be reading “A Kid’s Book About…,” 6:00 p.m. Tuesday, Square Books Jr., 111 Courthouse Square, Oxford, 662-236-2207
Storytime, “Clifford: Dream Big,” 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, Square Books Jr., 111 Courthouse Square, Oxford, 662-236-2207
Chapter Captains Book Club (kids 6-9) will be reading “Princess in Black: Bathtime Battle,” 6:00 p.m. Thursday, Square Books Jr., 111 Courthouse Square, Oxford, 662-236-2207
Storytime, “What a Small Cat Needs,” 10:00 a.m. Saturday, Square Books Jr., 111 Courthouse Square, Oxford, 662-236-2207
Story Time, “Very Hungry Caterpillar” Day! 10 a.m. Saturday, Lemuria Books, 202 Banner Hall, 4465 I-55 North, Jackson, 601-366-7619
— Sales and/or Events Reported by Lemuria Books (Jackson); Lorelei Books (Vicksburg); Square Books (Oxford).
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