U.S. Senator Jacky Rosen announced she will bring a Las Vegas teenager, Dominic Rampa, and his mother, Rebecca Ennis, to President Trump's Joint Address to Cong
Gov. Joe Lombardo is urging Congress and the Trump administration to refrain from slashing Medicaid funding, warning that cuts to essential programs alone “will not solve Washington’s spending problem or the rising cost of
A budget blueprint approved by Congressional Republicans this week would slash $880 billion over a decade from federal health and energy programs.
Congress does nobody any favors — least of all, those who truly need Medicaid — by ignoring the fate of fiscally unsustainable entitlement programs. But whatever direction congressional Republicans take — and that remains uncertain — actual budget “cuts” to Medicaid are exceedingly unlikely.
Republicans have made it known that they’re considering plans to cut billions of dollars from the Medicaid program.
Residential treatment for addiction is expected to become more available to Nevada Medicaid beneficiaries this year, even as congressional Republicans consider cuts to the insurance program for low-income people.