Half of states are "failing" amid the Medicaid redeterminations process, according to the NAACP.
The civil rights organization published a report Nov. 16, grading each state's Medicaid redetermination efforts. The organization issued failing grades to any state with a procedural disenrollment rate above 5% that has not paused disenrollments. The NAACP also gave any state that has not expanded Medicaid an "F" rating.
Twenty-four states received an incomplete rating from the NAACP — these states had procedural disenrollment rates above 5% and were forced to pause disenrollments, had not reported disenrollment data yet, or began redeterminations after Sept. 30.
Just one state, Hawaii, received a passing grade from the NAACP.
Here are the 25 states that received "F" ratings on NAACP's scorecard:
- Alabama
Procedural disenrollment rate: 87%
- Arizona
Procedural disenrollment rate: 71%
- Arkansas
Procedural disenrollment rate: 77%
- California
Procedural disenrollment rate: 88%
- Florida
Procedural disenrollment rate: 51%
- Georgia
Procedural disenrollment rate: 86%
- Indiana
Procedural disenrollment rate: 85%
- Kansas
Procedural disenrollment rate: 82%
- Louisiana
Procedural disenrollment rate: 76%
- Michigan
Procedural disenrollment rate: 83%
- Mississippi
Procedural disenrollment rate: 79%
- Missouri
Procedural disenrollment rate: 79%
- Montana
Procedural disenrollment rate: 76%
- New Hampshire
Procedural disenrollment rate: 81%
- North Carolina
Procedural disenrollment rate: 87%
- Oklahoma
Procedural disenrollment rate: 75%
- Rhode Island
Procedural disenrollment rate: 83%
- South Carolina
Procedural disenrollment rate: 73%
- South Dakota
Procedural disenrollment rate: 56%
- Tennessee
Procedural disenrollment rate: 76%
- Texas
Procedural disenrollment rate: 67%
- Utah
Procedural disenrollment rate: 94%
- Washington
Procedural disenrollment rate: 88%
- Wisconsin
Procedural disenrollment rate: 61%
- Wyoming
Procedural disenrollment rate: 0%