KFF.org State Health Facts - Your source for state health data
HomeHome50 State ComparisonsIndividual State ProfilesSearchTools
Print Add to Saved Links

     Choose a different category...

Medicaid & SCHIP 
Medicaid Spending
State Medicaid Spending
Medicaid Budget Actions
Medicare Drug Benefit: Clawback Payments
Medicaid Physician Fees
Medicaid Enrollment
Children's Medicaid and SCHIP Eligibility
Medicaid/SCHIP Eligibility
SSI Beneficiaries
Medicaid Medically Needy
Medicaid Managed Care
Births Financed by Medicaid
Enrollment Practices for Pregnant Women
Enrollment Practices for Children
Renewal Practices for Children
SCHIP
Home and Community-Based Services
False Claims Act
Print Add to Saved Links

Total Supplemental Security Income (SSI) Beneficiaries, 2007

 
Bar Graph Table Map Map & Table
  Rank by: 
  Rank Order:




 Total SSI Beneficiaries
 
United States7,359,525
 
Alabama165,521
Alaska11,440
Arizona100,724
Arkansas95,802
California1,247,231
Colorado58,497
Connecticut54,197
Delaware14,401
District of Columbia22,102
Florida431,015
Georgia208,016
Hawaii23,262
Idaho23,697
Illinois261,901
Indiana104,366
Iowa44,659
Kansas40,405
Kentucky184,378
Louisiana162,271
Maine33,328
Maryland97,858
Massachusetts178,856
Michigan228,068
Minnesota78,401
Mississippi122,745
Missouri121,876
Montana15,629
Nebraska23,052
Nevada35,548
New Hampshire15,119
New Jersey156,374
New Mexico56,387
New York648,908
North Carolina205,604
North Dakota8,003
Ohio257,874
Oklahoma85,102
Oregon64,031
Pennsylvania333,531
Rhode Island31,101
South Carolina105,519
South Dakota12,961
Tennessee163,142
Texas544,605
Utah24,472
Vermont13,920
Virginia140,419
Washington121,577
West Virginia78,931
Wisconsin96,037
Wyoming5,832
 


Sources:

Table 9, SSI Annual Statistical Report, 2007, Social Security Administration, Office of Policy, released October 2008. Available at http://www.socialsecurity.gov/policy/docs/statcomps/ssi_asr/2007/ssi_asr07.xls.

Definitions:

SSI: Supplemental Security Income is a federal entitlement program that provides cash assistance to low-income aged, blind, and disabled individuals. Individuals receiving SSI benefits are eligible for Medicaid coverage in all states except "section 209(b)" states, which have opted to use their more restrictive 1972 criteria in determining Medicaid eligibility for SSI recipients. Section 209(b) of the 1972 amendments to the Social Security Act allowed states the option of continuing to use their own eligibility criteria in determining Medicaid eligibility for the elderly and disabled rather than extending Medicaid coverage to all of those individuals who qualify for SSI benefits. As of 2001, eleven states (Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Minnesota, Missouri, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, and Virginia) had elected the "209(b)" option to apply their 1972 eligibility criteria to aged or disabled individuals receiving SSI benefits for purposes of determining Medicaid eligibility.



  Help


KFF.org Kaisernetwork.org Kaiseredu.org GlobalHealthReporting.org Global Health Facts.orghealth08.org
Search Contact Us Mailing List Privacy Statement