ATLANTA (AP) — A federal watchdog reported Thursday on a Georgia Medicaid program that requires able-bodied adults to document low-paying work to be eligible for health care, a model the Trump administration is preparing to roll out nationwide.
A key finding of the U.S. Government Accountability Office is that the Georgia Pathways program has spent more than twice as much on administrative costs than it has on providing care. The report comes after Republicans throughout the U.S. as part of the “big, beautiful bill” signed into law by .