logo
Nearly a third of pregnant rural Arkansans rely on Medicaid, study shows

Nearly a third of pregnant rural Arkansans rely on Medicaid, study shows

Yahoo16-05-2025
(Getty Images)
Pregnant Arkansas women living in rural areas will face even greater challenges obtaining obstetric care if Congress approves proposed cuts in Medicaid, according to health policy experts who discussed a new report Thursday.
Arkansas as a whole has the 10th highest share of women of childbearing age covered by Medicaid in rural areas, according to a Georgetown University Center for Children and Families study presented during a webinar Thursday.
The report also highlighted 20 U.S. counties where approximately half of their women of childbearing age are covered by Medicaid. One of those counties is in Arkansas, according to the study. Eastern Arkansas' Lee County has about 8,100 residents and a nearly 39% poverty rate, according to the U.S. Census.
Medicaid is a significant source of health coverage for women of childbearing age, especially for those living in small towns and rural communities, the report found. The study defines these communities as non-metropolitan counties with urban areas of fewer than 50,000 residents.
Bills to improve Arkansas maternal health, change ballot initiative process head to Sanders' desk
'It's absolutely critical for maternal and infant health that women have access to affordable, comprehensive healthcare before, during and after they get pregnant,' said Joan Alker, Georgetown University Center for Children and Families director and lead author of the report.
Women in rural areas face greater challenges to accessing care because of a shortage of providers, hospital closures and the loss of labor and delivery units and obstetrical capacity, Alker said.
Nationally, 23.3% of women of childbearing age (19 to 44 years old) in rural areas are covered by Medicaid, compared to 20.5% of women in metropolitan areas, according to the report. Louisiana and New Mexico have the highest share of Medicaid-covered women, with just over 40% each. Nearly 28% of women of childbearing age are covered by Medicaid in rural Arkansas.
For many Arkansas women, especially those living in rural areas with low-income families, Medicaid may be the only health insurance source to keep them healthy throughout pregnancy, Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families Health Policy Director Camille Richoux said in an interview.
'For me, it's a great thing that we have Medicaid ensuring that women throughout the state have coverage options,' Richoux said. 'It also means that we have more at stake whenever there are threats to Medicaid…this report really makes that case of how any kind of threats or cuts around Medicaid could have the potential to be devastating to a lot of women in the state and especially in a state that has so many challenges in maternal health.'
Arkansas has one of the highest maternal mortality rates in the nation and the third-highest infant mortality rate, according to the Arkansas Center for Health Improvement.
Access to Medicaid could change under proposed federal legislation. A U.S. House panel approved a plan Wednesday that would reduce federal spending on Medicaid by $625 billion over the next decade.
The proposal includes a provision for work requirements. Arkansas implemented a work-reporting requirement in 2018 that led to 18,000 people losing coverage, in part because enrollees were unaware or confused about how to report they were working. A federal judge later ruled the program was illegal. Arkansas officials submitted a request for a new work requirement earlier this year.
'The first time didn't work': Georgia and Arkansas scale back Medicaid work requirements
Rural communities have a lot at stake with the congressional Medicaid debate, Alker said, because the loss of Medicaid revenue would place 'additional pressure on a very strained system.' Nearly half of all births in rural areas are covered by Medicaid, and less access to obstetrical care leads to worse outcomes to moms and their babies, she said.
According to one study, 293 rural hospitals stopped providing obstetric care between 2011 and 2023. Another study found that more than 52% of rural hospitals did not provide obstetric care by 2022.
Arkansas ranks sixth in terms of states with the highest percentage of maternity care deserts, according to the March of Dimes, which defines maternity care deserts as areas with no birthing facility or obstetric clinician. Nearly 51% of Arkansas is a maternity care desert, according to the organization's 2024 report.
'If we see more hospital closures and loss of labor and delivery units, all women living in rural areas are at risk of losing out on the care they need, regardless of who is their insurer, if that care is just not available,' Alker said. 'So these communities will not be able to grow and thrive without a robust system to support women and families.'
Beyond reducing healthcare access for all rural community residents, not just those insured through Medicaid, Richoux noted hospital closures can hurt an entire community, especially when it's the area's largest employer.
'Not everybody can just leave…to move out of an area is an easy thing to say, a lot harder to do,' she said. 'And people shouldn't have to be forced to leave their small, rural town because their hospital is unnecessarily closed.'
The full Georgetown University report is available here.
SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Early Warning Sign for Aggressive Cancers Discovered
Early Warning Sign for Aggressive Cancers Discovered

Newsweek

time21 minutes ago

  • Newsweek

Early Warning Sign for Aggressive Cancers Discovered

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A protein found in our cells could act as an early warning sign for aggressive cancers—and a new target for drugs to stop them spreading. This is the discovery of scientists from Brunel University of London, who have shown for the first time that a protein that helps a cell prepare to divide can also trigger metastasis. High levels of 'SAS-6' makes cells grow more and longer cilia—tiny antennae that sense their surroundings. These cilia activate a pathway known as YAP/TAZ, which controls genes that help tumors grow and spread to other parts of the body, the researchers explained. The SAS-6 protein plays a role in building tiny hair-like structures on the cell's surface, which can then activate signals that make cancer cells more aggressive. Illustration representing lungs and cancer spread inside body. Illustration representing lungs and cancer spread inside body. wildpixel/Getty Images "Our data uncover a novel role for the centriolar protein SAS-6 in ciliogenesis [the building of the cell's antennae], YAP activation and cancer cell invasion," said Brunel biomedical scientist Barbara Tanos in a statement. "The main cause of death in cancer patients is metastatic disease, which happens when cancer cells invade tissues far away from the main tumor [spreading to another part of the body]," Dr Tanos explained. "We found that cells with increased SAS-6 levels became more invasive and that this invasion was reverted by removing cilia." The team investigated what happens when cells produce a version of SAS-6 that does not break down. They found the cells not only grew longer cilia but moved more and noticeably changed shape, becoming flatter and more flexible—all signs of an invasive cell. When the scientists blocked the YAP pathway or removed the cilia, however, the cancer invasion "reduced to almost negligible levels". They then found the same pattern in a real lung cancer cell line, which has high levels of SAS-6. Removing the protein in this patient-derived cell line stopped the cancer's ability to spread. Because several human cancers have unusually high levels of SAS-6, it could potentially be used as a marker for metastatic cancer, the scientists said. Research suggests these SAS-6-associated cancers include lung adenocarcinoma, colorectal cancer and breast cancer, among others. Lung adenocarcinoma (a type of non-small cell lung cancer), for example, is the most common type of lung cancer in the U.S., accounting for 45 percent of all lung cancer cases in 2021, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Understanding how SAS-6 and cilia drive cancer cell invasion could also help design novel therapies based on cilia specific signaling pathways, the researchers explained. "We think this gives us a new way to understand how cellular signals control cancer spread," said Tanos. "It could lead to smarter therapies and better ways to predict which cancers will turn aggressive." Newsweek has reached out to the researchers for comment. Do you have a tip on a health story that Newsweek should be covering? Do you have a question about cancer? Let us know via health@ Reference Hargreaves, E., Collinson, R., Jenks, A. D., Staszewski, A., Tsalikis, A., Bodoque, R., Arias-Garcia, M., Abdi, Y., Al-Malki, A., Yuan, Y., Natrajan, R., Haider, S., Iskratsch, T., Wang, W.-J., Godinho, S., Palaskas, N. J., Calvo, F., Vivanco, I., Zech, T., & Tanos, B. E. (2025). Dysregulated SASS6 expression promotes increased ciliogenesis and cell invasion phenotypes. Life Science Alliance, 8(10).

Judge Orders Health Officials to Stop Sharing Some Medicaid Data With Immigration Authorities
Judge Orders Health Officials to Stop Sharing Some Medicaid Data With Immigration Authorities

Epoch Times

time21 minutes ago

  • Epoch Times

Judge Orders Health Officials to Stop Sharing Some Medicaid Data With Immigration Authorities

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) must stop sharing some Medicaid data with immigration officials, a federal judge has ruled. U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria said on Aug. 12 that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), a component of HHS, failed to 'carry out a reasoned decisionmaking process' before deciding to share the data with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

A Place At Home Enhances Dementia Care with PocketRN Partnership
A Place At Home Enhances Dementia Care with PocketRN Partnership

Yahoo

time43 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

A Place At Home Enhances Dementia Care with PocketRN Partnership

National in-home care franchise expands access to dementia care services through new CMS-backed program OMAHA, Neb., Aug. 18, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- A Place At Home, a senior-focused home care provider franchise, is thrilled to announce a new partnership with PocketRN, a virtual nursing platform supporting the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) GUIDE Model – a national initiative designed to improve care for individuals living with dementia. Through this innovative partnership, nearly all A Place At Home franchise owners will support the delivery of in-home respite care for families enrolled in GUIDE through PocketRN. Eligible dementia patients and their caregivers will receive access to Medicare-covered respite services provided by A Place At Home, alongside 24/7 virtual nursing support and ongoing caregiver management delivered by PocketRN. The program offers four-hour increments of respite care, totaling up to 72 hours annually, helping families navigate the complexities of dementia care. "Dementia deeply affects the entire family, not just the person diagnosed. Through the CMS GUIDE Model, we're now able to bring meaningful support directly into the home – support that was rarely accessible before," said Dustin Distefano, co-founder and CEO of A Place At Home. "This partnership allows professionally trained caregivers from A Place At Home to provide respite, guidance, and peace of mind to spouses, children, and other family members who are often overwhelmed and under-resourced. It's a powerful step toward caring for the whole family, not just the condition." How It Works Local A Place At Home franchise owners will refer clients with a diagnosis or suspected diagnosis of dementia who are enrolled in Medicare Parts A and B to PocketRN. PocketRN then conducts a comprehensive assessment in alignment with Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) requirements, and once approved, the A Place At Home team conducts a home safety evaluation and initiates care. The initiative also helps alleviate one of the top concerns in caregiving: burnout. According to a recent AARP study, over 84% of family caregivers report that caregiving had a moderate or high impact on the stress they feel daily "Caregiving for a loved one, especially one with dementia, can be overwhelming physically, emotionally, and financially," said Jennifer Axelrod, National Accounts and Growth Strategist at A Place At Home. "This partnership gives families a lifeline. By combining Medicare-covered respite hours with 24/7 access to trained nurses, we're not only expanding care, but we're also helping caregivers breathe, reset, and know they're not alone." This program offers relief, especially during post-hospital transitions, by providing a trained care team while families sort everything out. Franchise owners benefit from full training and bi-weekly webinars to ensure operational readiness. Additionally, after-hours nursing calls are routed directly to PocketRN, improving patient care and reducing administrative burden. "A Place At Home is excited to continue building partnerships like this one to grow upon our mission of helping families when they can't be there," said Axelrod. "It enhances our service offering and empowers our franchisees to deliver an even higher level of compassionate care." For more information about A Place At Home and its services, or to learn more about franchise opportunities, visit About A Place At Home A Place At Home offers a range of customized senior-focused care services, including in-home care, care coordination, and assistance in identifying and transitioning to senior living alternatives. The company is dedicated to preserving the quality of life for seniors by giving them the support they need to stay as independent as possible for as long as possible. Visit for more information. Media Contact: Allyson PiantanidaAPiantanida@ View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE A Place At Home Sign in to access your portfolio

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store