Jeffersonville Medicaid providers recorded $255,036 in 2024 for services within the Temporary National Codes (Non-Medicare) group, based on the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Medicaid Provider Spending database. That total marks a 61.1% jump from 2023, when claims for these services reached $158,307.
Medicaid, a major component of the U.S. health care system, is a public insurance program run by states and funded by both federal and state governments. It provides coverage for low-income groups, seniors, children, and people with disabilities.
Because tax dollars fund Medicaid reimbursement, local billing shifts can reveal how public funds are used for community health care spending.
The “Temporary National Codes (Non-Medicare)” group comprises Medicaid-billed services grouped by care type using specific HCPCS and CPT code prefixes and ranges. For this dataset, each billing code was allocated to a unique service group for consistent aggregation and ranking over time, preventing overlap between categories.
Although several Medicaid service groups saw increases, Temporary National Codes (Non-Medicare) led all categories for Jeffersonville in total payments during 2024.
Statewide in Vermont, the Temporary National Codes (Non-Medicare) group ranked eighth in total Medicaid payments in 2024.
In the five years before 2024, Jeffersonville’s Medicaid payments for the Temporary National Codes (Non-Medicare) group climbed by $255,036, showing 0% growth overall. However, certain years saw sharp increases, with significant gains posted in both 2022 and 2022.
Across the city, Medicaid payments for Temporary National Codes (Non-Medicare) were most concentrated within a small number of ZIP codes. In 2024, ZIP code 05464 alone made up $255,036 of the total, reflecting 100% of Jeffersonville’s Medicaid total for these services that year.
A limited segment of billing codes accounted for most of the Medicaid spending within the Temporary National Codes (Non-Medicare) category.
Comparatively, Medicaid payments in Jeffersonville for the Temporary National Codes (Non-Medicare) services climbed 61.1% from 2023 to 2024, whereas overall city Medicaid payments for all categories rose 7.7% in the same interval.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services reports that federal and state Medicaid spending reached roughly $871.7 billion during the 2023 fiscal year—representing about 18% of all national health expenditures, up from approximately $613.5 billion in 2019 prior to the COVID-19 pandemic.
This represents an approximate 40% increase within a few years, mainly due to increasing enrollment and higher service utilization during and after the pandemic period.
Recent budget measures passed under the Trump administration contain multiple measures designed to trim federal funding for Medicaid and change the program’s structure. The “One Big Beautiful Bill Act,” enacted in 2025, is expected to reduce federal Medicaid costs by more than $1 trillion over ten years. These changes—including cost-sharing policies and work requirements—could affect both coverage and state budgets, as more costs shift to state governments.
| Year | Total Medicaid Payments | % Change From Previous Year |
|---|---|---|
| 2021 | $41,940 | – |
| 2022 | $537,709 | 1182.1% |
| 2023 | $158,306 | -70.6% |
| 2024 | $255,036 | 61.1% |
| Rank | Category | Medicaid Payments | Share of City Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Temporary National Codes (Non-Medicare) | $255,036 | 88.3% |
| 2 | Medicine Services and Procedures | $33,637 | 11.7% |
| HCPCS Code | Description | Medicaid Payments | Claims |
|---|---|---|---|
| S9480 | Intensive outpatient psychia | $255,036 | 7 |
Note: HCPCS codes are shown for context within the category. Category totals and rankings in this article are based on standardized service groupings rather than individual billing codes.
Information in this article was obtained from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Medicaid Provider Spending database. The source data can be found here.




