Health
Health care or housing? More states are using Medicaid funds to help the homeless
In some states, the line between housing and health care is becoming increasingly blurred.
The Medicaid program is intended to offer government assistance with medical expenses for those with low incomes. Yet in at least 20 states, some of those funds are being allocated to social services — including housing support for the homeless.
While some tout the move as a means of alleviating the health conditions that can arise from poor living conditions, others say the funding will not solve the underlying problems.
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The federal government oversees the Medicaid program, yet each state can set its own benefits and eligibility requirements.
“States have broad flexibility in their Medicaid programs to create a program that is unique,” said Dr. Marc Samuels, founder and CEO of ADVI Health, a health care and life sciences advisory and consulting services firm headquartered in Washington, D.C.
In some states, Medicaid funds are being directed toward housing support for the homeless. (iStock)
“In general, states look to aid in housing on a temporary basis in an effort to focus on social determinants of health/population-based issues around serious mental illness or substance abuse disorders, and those with disabilities or receiving long-term care, high-risk pregnancy, or with a history of chronic homelessness,” he told Fox News Digital.
Which states offer Medicaid-funded housing?
At least 20 states today cover housing support services under their Medicaid program, according to the National Academy of State Health Policy (NASHP).
“There are five states — Arizona, California, New York, Oregon and Washington — that have received the approval from the federal government to cover short-term housing assistance through their Medicaid program using a specific type of waiver from the federal government (section 1115 demonstration waiver),” NASHP said in a statement provided to Fox News Digital.
“States have broad flexibility in their Medicaid programs to create a program that is unique.”
States can also offer this type of coverage through a program called Money Follows the Person.
This program “facilitates rebalancing states’ long-term care services and supports from institutional to community-based care,” the agency said.
A homeless woman begs for money along a city sidewalk. Her sign reads, “Homeless & Hungry – Please help. Thank you.” (Getty Images)
California has unveiled the most ambitious plan so far for state-funded housing support.
In 2022, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced a $12 billion, five-year plan to revamp its Medicaid program — called Medi-Cal — to include a range of social services outside the scope of medical care.
Those non-traditional services, officially called “in lieu of services,” include housing deposits, moving costs and rent, according to the state’s Health and Human Services Agency website.
California’s non-traditional medical services are officially called “in lieu of services.”
Nearly all the state’s public and private managed care health insurers participating in Medi-Cal will cover housing-related expenses.
In Sept. 2023, the Oregon Health Authority submitted a proposal for expanded Medicaid benefits that would include six months of rent assistance. If approved, the housing support would be available starting in Nov. 2024.
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Arizona’s Medicaid program — the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System (AHCCCS) — also offers funds for a “limited number of housing units” for members, according to the state’s health services website.
Non-traditional services — officially called “in lieu of services” in California — include housing deposits, moving costs and rent. (iStock)
Arkansas, Massachusetts, Hawaii, New Jersey and Washington are among the other states that have launched Medicaid initiatives targeting homelessness, according to the National Academy of State Health Policy (NASHP).
Last month, New York was approved for a Medicaid expansion that will include housing support — and additional states are expected to follow suit.
Link between housing and health
Proponents of this funding believe there is a direct connection between housing and health.
The Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission (MACPAC), a non-partisan federal agency that makes recommendations to Congress about Medicaid programs, stated in a 2018 brief that “poor housing conditions can worsen health outcomes related to infectious and chronic disease, injury and mental health, and may also affect childhood development through exposure to harmful toxins such as lead.”
The agency added that people experiencing homelessness or housing instability may struggle to get health care for routine visits as well as necessary medical treatments.
“Data suggest that among those who are chronically homeless, the provision of supportive housing … led to a decrease in emergency department use,” MACPAC wrote in the brief.
While some tout the move to use Medicaid funds for housing as a way to alleviate the health conditions that can arise from poor living conditions, others say the funding will not solve the underlying problems. (iStock)
Dr. Marc Siegel, clinical professor of medicine at NYU Langone Medical Center and a Fox News medical contributor, said he does not think that providing housing is the answer to homelessness.
“It is a huge money drain on the state and it doesn’t solve the underlying problems of chronic mental health issues, excess drug use and the spread of infectious disease — not to mention the unemployment that drives all of it,” he told Fox News Digital.
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Siegel pointed out that housing in California is not currently affordable — an issue that affects everyone, not just the homeless.
“Using Medicaid to finance housing for the homeless bypasses the blue-collar workers who can’t really afford housing either,” he said.
The doctor does believe that shelter is a health issue, however.
“The vast majority of health variations are driven by factors completely unrelated to health care.”
“Without shelter, you are prone to many more medical issues, including dehydration, exposure to the elements, contagious diseases, malnutrition, drug use and the impact of mental illness,” he said.
“I like the New York City shelter system, which has worked well over the last three decades,” Siegel added. “It is starting to struggle now because of the influx of migrants with nowhere to go — which also represents part of the public health crisis.”
“Using Medicaid to finance housing for the homeless bypasses the blue-collar workers who can’t really afford housing either,” said Dr. Marc Siegel. (iStock)
Other doctors, however, said they are supportive of Medicaid funding going to housing costs.
“Many people think of health care as what happens in a doctor’s office, hospital or pharmacy — but what I can do for my patients as a doctor can quickly be undone if they don’t have food to eat or a roof over their heads,” said Colin Banas, M.D., chief medical officer for DrFirst, a health care technology company in Maryland.
“It’s refreshing to see that states such as California, Arizona, Oregon and Arkansas are allocating Medicaid funding in innovative and practical ways, especially as people experiencing homelessness are nearly twice as likely to have diabetes or experience heart attacks, according to the CDC,” he told Fox News Digital.
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Rather than using “scarce resources” for housing instead of traditional health care, Banas said he believes that an “additive approach” is ideal.
“Programs addressing homelessness should help us learn where interventions can have the greatest impact,” he said.
Homeless people stand with their belongings in front of an outpatient mental health clinic in Los Angeles, California, on Dec. 6, 2022. (FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty Images)
Scott Shipman, M.D., executive director of the Institute for Population Health at Creighton University in Omaha, Nebraska, said the association of secure housing with better health is “widely understood.”
In an email to Fox News Digital, Shipman referred to Medicaid-funded housing as “a means of achieving better, and more stable, health while curtailing a vicious, often multigenerational cycle of costly recurring physical and mental health services that are exacerbated by prolonged housing insecurity.”
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When state governments pursue housing coverage through Medicaid waivers, they get a match of federal funding, Shipman noted.
“These programs do not shift funding away from medical services in favor of housing, but rather attract additional resources to meet housing needs, typically for those whose health is most directly at risk due to inadequate housing,” he said.
Shipman called for investments in addressing community-level social needs rather than simply pouring more money into “shiny new medical care technology,” which he said will lead to “overspending and disappointing results.”
“It doesn’t solve the underlying problems of chronic mental health issues, excess drug use and the spread of infectious disease.”
“The vast majority of health variations are driven by factors completely unrelated to health care,” he added.
To qualify for housing assistance, people must meet certain needs-based health criteria, including serious mental illness, disability, pregnancy or homelessness, according to NASHP.
Fox News Digital reached out to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services as well as several state health agencies for additional comment.
For more Health articles, visit www.foxnews.com/health.
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Brain aging may accelerate after cancer treatment, study suggests
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Surviving cancer as a child or young adult may have a lasting impact on aging, new research suggests.
Researchers at the University of Rochester Medical Center looked at whether life-saving treatments, like chemotherapy and radiation, could speed up biological aging.
They also aimed to determine whether this age acceleration was linked to cognitive issues related to memory, focus and learning.
The team analyzed blood samples from a group of 1,400 long-term survivors treated at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, using epigenetic clocks — tools that estimate biological age by examining chemical tags on DNA.
Biological age is determined based on damage the cells accumulate over time, versus chronological age, which is measured by how long someone has been alive, according to scientists.
Biological age is determined based on the damage cells accumulate over time, according to scientists. (iStock)
“These well-established aging-related biomarkers have previously been associated with neurocognitive impairment and decline in older non-cancer populations, particularly in cognitive domains related to aging and dementia, such as memory, attention and executive function,” the study stated.
Most of the group consisted of acute lymphoblastic leukemia survivors, or Hodgkin lymphoma survivors. Participants were at least five years past their treatment, though some had survived for several decades.
They underwent neurocognitive testing to measure their attention span, memory and information processing speed.
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Chemotherapy was found to have the greatest impact on aging acceleration. The study suggests the treatment can alter DNA structure and cause cellular damage.
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“It’s no surprise to find out that young people with cancer who have chemo early in life are affected in terms of long-term aging,” Dr. Marc Siegel, senior medical analyst for Fox News, told Fox News Digital.
Participants underwent neurocognitive testing to measure their attention span, memory and speed of information processing. (iStock)
Researchers also found that cellular aging was closely linked to cognitive performance, as survivors of a higher biological age had more difficulty with memory and attention.
“Chemo poisons and damages cellular function — hopefully the cancer cells more than normal cells, but there is a significant impact on normal cells as well,” said Siegel, who was not involved in the study.
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“There is also something called ‘chemo brain,’ which causes at least temporary difficulty with memory, concentration, word finding and brain fog,” the doctor added.
The research team hopes to use these findings to focus on intervention efforts, specifically by determining when accelerated aging begins.
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“Young cancer survivors have many more decades of life to live,” lead study author AnnaLynn Williams, PhD, said in a press release. “If these accelerated aging changes are occurring early on and setting them on a different trajectory, the goal is to intervene to not only increase their lifespan, but improve their quality of life.”
The team hopes this research will help in the development of early intervention tools that aim to prevent cognitive decline. (iStock)
There were some limitations to the study. The researchers could not adjust for chronic health conditions or education because they are directly impacted by treatment.
Additionally, the study only looked at the survivors at a single point of time, so it could not directly prove causation.
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The study was published in the journal Nature Communications.
Fox News Digital reached out to the researchers for comment.
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