In In The News

As federal lawmakers debate steep reductions to Medicaid, Michigan health leaders are raising urgent concerns about the consequences for the state’s behavioral health system. They warn that the proposed funding changes — ranging from block grants to reductions in federal cost-sharing — have sparked urgent concern across hospitals, mental health providers, and policy advocates. Proposed funding cuts have the power to dismantle critical services, especially for residents facing poverty, mental illness, or substance use disorders — groups already struggling to access timely and affordable care.

Organizations across Michigan are mobilizing to prevent the cuts before they happen. The Michigan League for Public Policy (MLPP), Community Mental Health Association of Michigan (CMHA),  and Michigan Health and Hospital Association (MHA) are three of more than 140 Michigan groups involved with Protect MI Care, a coalition working to raise awareness, organize public education campaigns, and put pressure on lawmakers.

“This is such an important factor to the overall health and well-being of Michiganders,” says MLPP president and CEO Monique Stanton. “We really should be looking at ways to make our system better … not what we’re going to have to do if these massive cuts take place.”

Read more at Second Wave Media.

Article also appeared in:
Time.News
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