Mothers and Children Last: The Oregon Medicaid Experiment
- 1 January 1992
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Journal of Law & Medicine
- Vol. 18 (1-2) , 97-126
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0098858800011369
Abstract
“There is always a lofty goal in the research work of medicine but too often it has been the bodies of the poor on … whom the unholy testing is done.“James Jones, Bad Blood: The Tuskeegee Syphilis ExperimentIn 1989 and 1991, the Oregon legislature enacted a series of initiatives to extend health coverage to uninsured state residents. Among these initiatives is an act that seeks to extend a modified set of Medicaid benefits to state residents with family incomes below the federal poverty level. This act also reduces benefits the state is now required to provide to Medicaid-enrolled women of childbearing age and children. This Article explores the legal context in which the Oregon Medicaid experiment must be evaluated. It argues that by reducing the level of coverage to which tens of thousands of exceedingly poor, Medicaid-eligible women and children are entitled, the experiment falls outside the scope of valid research that the United States Department of Health and Human Services may either sanction or fund. The Article also discusses the implications of the Oregon experiment, if approved, for the future direction of the Medicaid program in particular, and for health care reform for the poor, generally.Keywords
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