Black Medicaid coverage in New York
33
% of Black residents
About 33% of Black residents of New York receive Medicaid coverage. New York is a Medicaid expansion state.
US national average: 19 % of Black residents
Historical trend
What this means for Black residents
That figure runs materially above the US national average of 19.0 % of Black residents enrolled.
Medicaid is the single largest payer for Black maternal and infant health care in New York, as it is in every US state. Beyond basic coverage, the coverage-specific levers that matter for Black health outcomes are: doula services coverage (which evidence shows reduces preterm birth and unplanned cesareans), midwife scope of practice (which addresses the obstetric-provider shortage in rural and majority-Black counties), and postpartum extension to 12 months (which reduces mortality in the post-delivery period when most maternal deaths actually occur).
The figures on this page are drawn from KFF Medicaid + State Medicaid Portal, which is the canonical public dataset for this indicator. See the References section below for supporting citations from MMWR, NEJM, and JAMA where the underlying drivers have been studied.
Policy actions
New York has adopted Medicaid expansion under the ACA, which cut the Black uninsured rate roughly in half since 2013. The ongoing policy challenge is enrollment churn — people losing coverage when eligibility is re-determined annually — which disproportionately affects Black enrollees due to addressing / employment instability.
Where to get help in your state
- Enroll in Medicaid or CHIP (New York): Start at Medicaid.gov
- ACA marketplace coverage: Healthcare.gov (open enrollment + special enrollment periods)
- FQHCs serve uninsured patients on a sliding-fee scale in New York: browse FQHCs
References & primary sources
- Primary dataset: KFF Medicaid + State Medicaid Portal
- KFF Medicaid Enrollment by Race/Ethnicity, State Health Facts. kff.org state indicator
- CMS Medicaid.gov State Overviews.
Data refreshed: