Thousands face Medicaid whiplash in South Dakota and North Carolina
CBSN
Until recently, Jonathan Murray relied on Medicaid to pay for treatments for multiple health conditions, including chronic insomnia. Murray, a 20-year-old restaurant worker from the college town of Brookings, South Dakota, said that without his medication, he would stay awake for several nights in a row.
"I'd probably not be able to work that much because I'd be tired but couldn't fall asleep," he said.
Murray's mother is paying $1,548 more than usual in health insurance premiums over three months to make sure he can afford his sleeping pills, other medication, lab work, and doctors' appointments.
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