JACKSON, Miss. - Mississippi has improved some of its poor health outcomes, but residents are still more likely to die unnecessarily than residents of any other state, state Health Officer Dr. Daniel Edney told legislators on Jan. 19.
Edney implored lawmakers to work with health officials to improve Mississippi’s status as the nation’s unhealthiest state, ranking at the bottom of virtually every health-care indicator and at the top of every health disparity.
“If we choose the right policies for our people, we will see us move off the radar of having the highest rate of preventable death,” Edney said at a news conference inside the Capitol.
Mississippi ranks worst for infant mortality, with Black infants nearly twice as likely as whites to die over the past decade, according to a report unveiled by the Mississippi State Medical Association.
While the state’s obesity and diabetes rates have declined recently, they remain among the nation’s highest, with heart disease still the state’s leading cause of death.
Increasing access to health care coverage for working-class Mississippians is key to improving outcomes, Edney said.
Mississippi is one of 10 states that have not expanded Medicaid coverage to people working in jobs that provide modest wages but no private health insurance.
The debate has stalled because of Republican opposition who refer to Medicaid as “welfare.”
But new Republican House Speaker Jason White says he wants legislators to consider Medicaid expansion as a way to bring up to $1B of federal money each year to the stat. White has not come out in full support of expansion.
As the new chairwoman of the House Medicaid Committee, Republican Rep. Missy McGee would play a big role in any push for expansion. She helped lead a successful effort last year to extend postpartum Medicaid coverage from two months to a full year. (The AP 01/19/24) Mississippi Leads Nation in Preventable Deaths, Official Says (mississippifreepress.org)
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