The state has built out services for children in custody, coming into belated compliance with the Kevin S. settlement.
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A team of state officials will work alongside their peers from other states to develop data-driven strategies and put into practice health and housing programs, said one state official.
“I’m basically one sewer line break away from shutting the whole [rehabilitation center] down," said Frank Corcoran, CEO of Sierra Vista Hospital in Truth or Consequences.
Robin Lee, right, is helped by Amanda Falkner, a family friend and caregiver, to drink a beverage last year at her home in Isle of Palms, S.C.…
Participants play a game at Martin Luther Lutheran Church last year at Respite Care Charleston, a nonprofit, in Charleston, S.C. There is prec…
Senate President Pro Tem Mary Kay Papen said she’s concerned about people who receive care from an Arizona-based provider set to close.
The state’s negotiations to prevent an Arizona-based mental health and substance abuse treatment provider La Frontera from leaving New Mexico have fallen flat, casting into uncertainty the services for nearly 3,800 clients in seven counties.
The New Mexico Center on Law and Poverty claim the department has failed to meet certain conditions of a court order, and as a result, some low-income New Mexicans eligible for food and medical assistance from the state continue to be denied access to benefits.
The audit report alleging $36 million in Medicaid overbilling has largely been keep secret. Even the providers, many of which have gone out of business, have been left to wonder what led the state Human Services Department to suspect them of fraud.