May 8, 2026 in healthcare transformation, HLTHworks, Medicaid

If We Were Starting Over: Why Medicaid Should Be Built Around Children, Not Chronic Disease

If Medicaid were designed today from scratch, it would start with children—not chronically ill adults.

But that’s not how the system operates.
Instead, we invest heavily at the end of the problem:
  • Advanced chronic disease
  • Complex adult conditions
  • High-cost interventions

And underinvest at the beginning.

The Most Powerful Lever We Ignore

The future cost curve of Medicaid is shaped in childhood.
  • Nutrition habits begin early
  • Behavioral health patterns emerge early
  • Preventable conditions take root early

Yet pediatric prevention remains underprioritized.

The Cost of Waiting

When we delay investment:
  • Chronic disease becomes inevitable
  • Behavioral health needs intensify
  • Costs compound over decades

This is not just inefficient—it is avoidable.

What Must Change

  • Guarantee completion of well-child visits
  • Expand developmental and behavioral screening
  • Strengthen maternal health continuity
  • Integrate care into schools and communities

The Long-Term Vision

We are funding the consequences of adulthood instead of investing in the foundation of health.

If Medicaid is redesigned around children and families, everything changes:
  • Health outcomes 
  • Cost trajectories 
  • Community stability