Mississippi Today
Reeves signs extended Medicaid coverage for new mothers into law
Reeves signs extended Medicaid coverage for new mothers into law
Mississippians on Medicaid officially have health care coverage for a year after giving birth.
Gov. Tate Reeves signed Senate Bill 2212 into law on Thursday, extending postpartum Medicaid coverage from two to 12 months.
His signature came after a last-minute endorsement of the bill before a legislative deadline last month. For a year prior, Reeves had not taken a stance on the issue. Two weeks before issuing his endorsement, he said he “needed more data” to decide.
The change will affect thousands. More than two-thirds of babies in Mississippi are born to people on Medicaid.
Health experts, including State Health Officer Dr. Dan Edney, medical organizations and maternal health advocates have long pushed for the change. Mississippi’s maternal mortality rate is getting worse, and Mississippi has the highest infant mortality rate, preterm birth rate and low-birthweight rate in the country.
Experts say that extending postpartum coverage will improve health outcomes for babies and their mothers because it will allow them to seek care and address continuing pregnancy-related health issues long after they give birth, lowering the risk of preterm birth.
Advocates say the move is especially important after the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to overturn abortion rights last summer. The state is expecting thousands more births in the coming months.
Reeves, who faces reelection later this year, cited the overturning of Roe v. Wade in a press release as a leading factor in his support of the legislation.
“I believe continuing to offer care for new moms for up to 12 months after the birth of their baby is the right thing to do,” he said in the statement. “This is one more thing that we can do to tip the scales in favor of life. And that has to be our priority.”
For two years, the Senate passed the legislation multiple times, and it was repeatedly blocked by House leadership. But the political tides turned in late February after Reeves unexpectedly urged lawmakers via social media to pass the bill.
Quickly after, Division of Medicaid Executive Director Drew Snyder, who had also refused to take a stance on the legislation for months, wrote House Speaker Philip Gunn a letter voicing his support for the change. He estimated the policy change would cost the state $7.1 million, a fraction of its $3.9 billion surplus.
On Feb. 28, the House Medicaid Committee met for the first time, allowing the legislation to move to the House floor days later, where it passed.
Mississippi now joins 29 other states, including D.C., that have extended postpartum Medicaid coverage.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Did you miss our previous article…
https://www.biloxinewsevents.com/?p=224960
Mississippi Today
Doctors group asks state Supreme Court to clarify that abortions are illegal in Mississippi
A group of anti-abortion doctors is asking the state Supreme Court to reverse its earlier ruling stating that the right to an abortion is guaranteed by the Mississippi Constitution.
The original 1998 Supreme Court ruling that provides the right to an abortion for Mississippians conflicts with state law that bans most abortions in Mississippi.
The appeal to the Supreme Court comes after an earlier ruling by Hinds County Chancellor Crystal Wise Martin, who found the group of conservative physicians did not have standing to bring the lawsuit.
Mississippi members of the American Association of Pro-Life Obstetricians and Gynecologists argued that they could be punished for not helping a patient find access to an abortion since the earlier state Supreme Court ruling said Mississippians had a right to abortion under the state Constitution. But the Hinds County chancellor said they did not have standing because they could not prove any harm to them because of their anti abortion stance.
Attorney Aaron Rice, representing the doctors, said after the October ruling by Wise Martin that he intended to ask the state Supreme Court to rule on the case.
It was a Mississippi case that led to the controversial U.S. Supreme Court decision in 2022 to overturn Roe v. Wade, which had guaranteed since the early 1970s a national right to an abortion.
Mississippi had laws in place to ban most abortions once Roe v. Wade was overturned, But there also was the 1998 state Supreme Court ruling that provided the right to an abortion.
Despite that ruling, there are currently no abortion clinics in Mississippi. But in the lawsuit, the conservative physicians group pointed out the ambiguity of the issue since in normal legal proceedings a Supreme Court ruling on the constitutionality of an issue would trump state law.
But in her ruling, Wise Martin pointed out that the state Supreme Court in multiple recent high-profile rulings has limited standing or who has the ability to file a lawsuit. Wise Martin said testimony on the issue revealed that physicians had not been punished in Mississippi for refusing to perform abortions.
Both the state and a pro abortion rights group argued that the physicians did not have standing to pursue the lawsuit. The state also contends that existing law makes it clear that most abortions are banned in Mississippi.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Podcast: A critical Mississippi Supreme Court runoff
Voters will choose between Mississippi Supreme Court Justice Jim Kitchens and state Sen. Jenifer Branning in a runoff election on Nov. 26, the Tuesday before Thanksgiving. Mississippi Today’s Adam Ganucheau, Bobby Harrison, and Taylor Vance break down the race and discuss why the election is so important for the future of the court and policy in Mississippi.
READ MORE: As lawmakers look to cut taxes, Mississippi mayors and county leaders outline infrastructure needs
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
On this day in 1946
Nov. 18, 1946
Future U.S. Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall was nearly lynched in Columbia, Tennessee, just 30 miles from where the Ku Klux Klan was born.
He and his fellow NAACP lawyers had come here to defend Black men accused of racial violence. In a trial, Marshall and other NAACP lawyers won acquittals for nearly two dozen Black men.
After the verdicts were read, Marshall and his colleagues promptly left town. After crossing a river, they came upon a car in the middle of the road. Then they heard a siren. Three police cars emptied, and eight men surrounded the lawyers. An officer told Marshall he was being arrested for drunken driving, even though he hadn’t been drinking. Officers forced Marshall into the back seat of a car and told the other men to leave.
“Marshall knew that nothing good ever happened when police cars drove black men down unpaved roads,” author Gilbert King wrote in “Devil in the Grove.” “He knew that the bodies of blacks — the victims of lynchings and random murders — had been discovered along these riverbanks for decades. And it was at the bottom of Duck River that, during the trial, the NAACP lawyers had been told their bodies would end up.”
When the car stopped next to the river, Marshall could see a crowd of white men gathered under a tree. Then he spotted headlights behind them. It was a fellow NAACP lawyer, Zephaniah Alexander Looby, who had trailed them to make sure nothing happened. Reporter Harry Raymond concluded that a lynching had been planned, and “Thurgood Marshall was the intended victim.” Marshall never forgot the harrowing night and redoubled his efforts to bring justice in cases where Black defendants were falsely accused.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
-
News from the South - Missouri News Feed7 days ago
Veterans honored across Missouri, Illinois for Veterans day
-
Our Mississippi Home3 days ago
Create Art from Molten Metal: Southern Miss Sculpture to Host Annual Interactive Iron Pour
-
News from the South - Florida News Feed5 days ago
Trump taps Matt Gaetz as attorney general, Tulsi Gabbard as Intelligence official | National
-
News from the South - Georgia News Feed3 days ago
'Hunting for females' | First day of trial in Laken Riley murder reveals evidence not seen yet
-
Our Mississippi Home4 days ago
Traverse Whoville in Downtown Hattiesburg December 6th for Seuss-Themed Cookies, Stories, Family Fun and a Bit of Snow Thrown in for Good Measure
-
Local News2 days ago
Celebrate the holidays in Ocean Springs with free, festive activities for the family
-
News from the South - Alabama News Feed4 days ago
Lofton takes stand in murder trial, testifies he wanted to shoot restaurant manager, not kill him
-
News from the South - Alabama News Feed3 days ago
First woman installed as commanding officer of NAS Pensacola