2026年7月14日 / 美国东部时间凌晨5:00 / KFF健康新闻
随着特朗普政府设定的1月各州落实新的医疗补助工作要求的截止日期临近,一些州议员开始反击,呼吁公开点名那些拥有参保员工最多的大型企业。医疗补助计划是面向低收入和残疾人群体的政府医保项目。
加州议员试图恢复一项已过期的法案,要求该州识别出雇佣100名及以上员工且其雇员参与该州医疗补助计划“加州医疗补助计划(Medi-Cal)”的企业。内华达州自2017年起就有类似法律,但俄勒冈州的相关提案在今年3月立法会议结束后搁浅。
该加州法案的发起人、州民主党参议员洛拉·斯莫尔伍德-克耶瓦斯表示,她对工作要求生效后即将发生的情况深感担忧。该州数据显示,在超过1400万的加州医疗补助计划参保人中,近500万人将受该要求约束。
“我们认为这项法案关乎公平,”斯莫尔伍德-克耶瓦斯说,“纳税人有权知晓哪些大型企业将医疗成本转嫁给了公众,这是一项基本原则。”
加州州参议员洛拉·斯莫尔伍德-克耶瓦斯希望州政府识别出雇佣100名及以上员工且其雇员参与加州医疗补助计划的企业。贾森·阿蒙德 / 洛杉矶时报 盖蒂图片社供图
经常登上内华达州榜单的大型企业,如沃尔玛和亚马逊,曾表示该州将兼职和季节性员工计入了统计范围,而其全职小时工的薪资过高,本不应符合医疗补助资格。
沃尔玛发言人卡特里娜·普罗菲特表示,公司为大多数员工提供了负担得起的医疗保险,包括符合条件的兼职员工,且大多数计划包含免费的远程医疗选项。
“医疗负担得起以及获得优质护理仍是许多美国人面临的实际障碍,沃尔玛一直致力于成为解决方案的一部分,”普罗菲特说。
这场点名批评企业的运动,反映了关于这个州联邦联合医疗补助计划最大滥用者的两种对立说法。该计划2024年的政府支出接近9320亿美元。由美国医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心主任穆罕默德·奥兹领导的特朗普政府,一直在指责蓝州在打击保险欺诈和滥用行为方面不力。与此同时,州民主党领导人则进行反击,呼吁关注那些未提供可负担医保福利、导致纳税人补贴低收入劳动力医疗成本的大型雇主。
一些州考虑过实施经济处罚。新泽西州民主党州长米基·谢里尔在6月签署了一项法案,对雇佣至少50名医疗补助参保员工的企业处以罚款。雇佣50至249名医疗补助参保员工的企业,每人每年需缴纳325美元罚款,雇佣至少500名的企业每人每年需缴纳725美元。
今年华盛顿州和科罗拉多州的旨在处罚雇佣医疗补助参保员工企业的法案未能通过。
在加州首府萨克拉门托,民主党人正设法让大型企业为员工的医保成本买单。州议员与民主党州长加文·纽瑟姆达成协议,正在探索税收方案。纽瑟姆在州长任期的最后一年正考虑竞选总统,任何加税提案都将由新任州长决定。
根据共和党《一项宏大美好法案》(HR 1)的税收和支出法案,各州面临数十亿美元的资金损失,其中一项条款要求大多数州19至64岁的非残疾医疗补助参保者证明他们每月至少工作、志愿服务或上学80小时,才能保留医保资格。
但国会预算办公室的数据显示,到2034年,联邦工作要求预计将使全国 uninsured 人数增加超过500万。内布拉斯加州和蒙大拿州已开始执行该规定。
一位卫生政策研究人员表示,雇主的医疗补助参保情况报告凸显了低薪工人缺乏可负担医保选择的问题。根据KFF的数据,超过一半的无受抚养子女的医疗补助参保成年人已经达到了每月80小时的工作要求,或面临可能符合豁免条件的困境。
“有相当一部分人在工作——他们可能不符合工作要求的条款,也可能无法获得应有的豁免,同时也无法获得雇主提供的保险,”乔治敦大学儿童与家庭研究中心的研究教授埃德温·帕克说。
雇主们反驳
尽管公布雇主名单并未成功降低医疗补助成本,但支持者表示,衡量负担可以成为第一步,帮助议员们为进一步行动争取支持。
根据内华达州今年1月发布的报告,自2020年以来,亚马逊雇佣的医疗补助参保员工人数在该州所有企业中最多。在2025财年,沃尔玛、克拉克县学区、州政府和特斯拉跻身前五名。
雇主们辩称,这些报告具有误导性,因为统计范围包括了兼职和季节性员工。该州最新的报告仅统计全职员工,以及无法确认是全职还是兼职的员工。
2025年内华达州医疗补助计划中,亚马逊的参保员工为4914人,沃尔玛为3503人。
上榜企业不会面临任何处罚。
亚马逊表示,其支付给员工的工资是联邦最低工资每小时7.25美元的两倍多,并指出医疗补助资格的判定基于家庭收入和家庭规模,而非个人工资。这意味着两名薪资相同的员工,根据是否有子女或与父母同住,可能有不同的参保资格。
“将医疗补助问题归咎于亚马逊是转移注意力的说法,”亚马逊发言人阿丽莎·卡罗尔说,“真正需要做的是大幅提高联邦最低工资——这将对美国家庭起到巨大的推动作用。”
内华达州医疗补助计划2025财年为超过13.3万名全职员工及其14万多名家属的医疗服务支出了近9.5亿美元。尽管总支出在2025财年有所下降,但每名成员的年均成本增长了近17%。
曾赞助医疗补助参保员工名单立法的内华达州前议员伊瓦娜·坎塞拉表示,年度报告推动了一场重要的对话,“讨论我们想要什么样的经济,以及全职工作者薪资不足以负担医保是否正确、是否公平”。
岌岌可危的安全网
卫生研究人员表示,没有医保的人会推迟或跳过医疗服务,他们的孩子也可能最终失去医保。
一项分析发现,今年4月,参与医疗补助和儿童健康保险计划的儿童人数比2025年1月减少了200多万。加州是儿童参保人数降幅最大的州之一。
斯莫尔伍德-克耶瓦斯表示,居民医保覆盖的损失将与公共食品援助福利的减少叠加。她的法案目前正在州议会审议中。
她将加州医疗补助计划比作一张“破旧不堪的鱼网”,已经不堪重负,大量民众陷入其中。她说,特朗普总统的支出和税收法案正在拉扯这个安全网,使其千疮百孔。
当人们失去食品援助和医保福利时,他们不得不在支付药费和支付房租之间做出选择,斯莫尔伍德-克耶瓦斯说。
“我们将看到更多人无家可归,更多人住在车里,更多人涌向急诊室,”她说,“这对整个加州来说都是危险的。”
KFF健康新闻是一家全国性新闻机构,专注于卫生领域的深度报道,是独立卫生政策研究、民意调查和新闻机构KFF的核心运营项目之一。
Facing funding losses, states call out big businesses with employees on Medicaid
July 14, 2026 / 5:00 AM EDT / KFF Health News
As the Trump administration’s January deadline looms for states to enforce a new Medicaid work requirement, some state lawmakers are turning the tables by pushing to publicly name the largest companies that have employees enrolled in the government program covering low-income and disabled people.
California lawmakers seek to revive an expired law that would require the state to identify companies that employ 100 or more people and have employees enrolled in Medi-Cal, the state’s Medicaid program. Nevada has had a similar law in place since 2017, though a proposal for one in Oregon stalled when its legislative session ended in March.
The California bill author, Democratic state Sen. Lola Smallwood-Cuevas, said she is deeply troubled by what is going to happen when work requirements kick in. According to the state, nearly 5 million out of more than 14 million residents on Medi-Cal will be subject to the requirement.
“We think this is a bill that’s about fairness,” Smallwood-Cuevas said. “It’s a basic principle that taxpayers deserve transparency about which large employers are shifting their healthcare costs onto the public.”
California state Sen. Lola Smallwood-Cuevas wants the state to identify companies that employ 100 or more people and have employees enrolled in Medi-Cal. Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
Large employers that regularly top Nevada’s list, such as Walmart and Amazon, have said that the state included part-time and seasonal workers in their counts and that their full-time hourly employees make too much to qualify for Medicaid.
Walmart spokesperson Katrina Proffitt said that the company offers affordable medical coverage to most employees, including eligible part-time workers, and that most of its plans include no-cost virtual care options.
“Healthcare affordability and access to quality care remain real barriers for many Americans, and Walmart continues to be committed to being part of the solution,” Proffitt said.
The push to name and shame companies reflects dueling narratives about the biggest abusers of the joint state-federal Medicaid program, which reached nearly $932 billion in government spending in 2024. The Trump administration, led by Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Administrator Mehmet Oz, has called out blue states for not doing enough to fight insurer fraud and abuse. State Democratic leaders, meanwhile, are pushing back by calling attention to big employers that don’t offer affordable health benefits, which leaves taxpayers subsidizing healthcare costs for the low-wage workforce.
Some states have considered financial penalties. Democratic New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill signed a bill in June to fine businesses that have at least 50 Medicaid-enrolled employees. Companies with 50 to 249 workers on Medicaid will pay $325 a year per person, and those with at least 500 will pay $725.
Bills that would have penalized companies with workers enrolled in Medicaid failed in Washington state and Colorado this year.
In Sacramento, California, Democrats want to figure out a way to make large businesses pay for their employees’ health coverage. State lawmakers struck a deal with Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, who is contemplating a presidential bid as he wraps up his final year in the governor’s office, to explore tax options. Any tax hike would be up to the new governor.
States face losing billions of dollars under HR 1, the GOP tax-and-spending law known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, notably through a provision that requires nondisabled Medicaid enrollees ages 19 to 64 in most states to prove they are working, volunteering, or going to school at least 80 hours a month to keep their coverage.
Yet federal work requirements are projected to increase the number of uninsured people nationwide by more than 5 million by 2034, according to the Congressional Budget Office. Nebraska and Montana have begun enforcing the rule.
One health policy researcher said employer Medicaid reports highlight the lack of affordable healthcare options available to low-wage workers. More than half of adults enrolled in Medicaid who don’t have dependent children already meet the 80-hour-a-month requirement or face challenges that would likely qualify them for an exemption, according to KFF.
“There’s a whole set of people who are working — they may not satisfy the work requirement provisions, they may not get the exemption that they’re qualified for, and they don’t have access to that employer-sponsored insurance either,” said Edwin Park, a research professor at the Center for Children and Families at Georgetown University.
Employers push back
While employer lists haven’t succeeded in bringing down Medicaid costs, supporters say measuring the burden can be the first step and help lawmakers make the case for further action.
In Nevada, Amazon has employed more Medicaid enrollees than any other company since 2020, according to the state’s report published in January. For state fiscal year 2025, Walmart, the Clark County School District, the state government, and Tesla rounded out the top five.
Employers have argued that the reports are misleading because they have included part-time and seasonal employees. The state’s latest report includes only full-time employees, plus those who could not be confirmed as either full- or part-time employees.
That came to 4,914 Amazon employees and 3,503 Walmart workers in Nevada on Medicaid in 2025.
There are no penalties for companies on the list.
Amazon said it pays its workers more than double the $7.25-an-hour federal minimum wage and noted that Medicaid eligibility is based on household income and size rather than an individual’s wage. That means two employees who earn the same pay may have different eligibility depending on whether they have children or live with parents.
“Pointing fingers at Amazon over Medicaid is a red herring,” said spokesperson Alisa Carroll. “What really needs to happen is a significant and large increase in the federal minimum wage — that would be a big boost for American families.”
Nevada Medicaid spent nearly $950 million on healthcare for more than 133,000 full-time employees and more than 140,000 of their dependents. While the total amount spent dipped in fiscal year 2025, the average cost per member per year increased by nearly 17%.
Yvanna Cancela, a former Nevada lawmaker who sponsored the legislation on Medicaid work reports, said the annual reports force an important conversation “about whether or not this is the kind of economy we want and whether or not it is right or just that people who work full-time don’t make enough to have health insurance.”
A fraying safety net
Health researchers say that uninsured people delay or skip using healthcare and that their children may end up losing coverage, too.
One analysis found that more than 2 million fewer children were enrolled in Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program this April than in January 2025. California is among the states with the steepest enrollment losses among children.
The loss in healthcare coverage among residents will be compounded by the loss of public food assistance benefits, Smallwood-Cuevas said. Her bill is pending in the legislature.
She compared Medi-Cal to a trampoline that has become a “very tattered kind of fishnet” overwhelmed by people falling into it. President Trump’s spending-and-tax law pulls and rips at the safety net, she said.
When people lose food assistance and health benefits, they must choose between paying for medicine and paying for rent, Smallwood-Cuevas said.
“We’re going to see more people in their cars, more people on the street, and a lot more people in the emergency room,” she said. “That is dangerous for all of California.”
KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF — the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism.
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