yes
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They might, especially if the State provided Medicaid or other assistance for the child.
No.
Summer's father is Nick, he's married Phyills and they had a baby
After approval for medicaid due to pregnancy, both you and your unborn child should remain covered by medicaid through the duration of your pregnancy, plus two months past the month of childbirth. After the birth of your child, the baby should be eligible for newborn medicaid. Both parents of an eligible child may or may not become eligible for medicaid, depending on income and other factors.
The childs' father, married or not. Your relationship to the father is irrelevent. The father is the first on a long list of family members. Create a living will if that is not acceptable.
Yes, Medicaid can get money from the sale of the home even if your mother was not on the deed. As long as she and your father were legally married, then Medicaid can go after the property to repay the money Medicaid spent for her care. Medicaid will not, however, kick your father out or take more money than they spent on your mother.
If he is married to the child's mother the decision is theirs to make, but if he is not married to her the mother decides the child's last name.
It isn't the birth father, no one will ever change the childs birth father, but he will legally be the step father,until the divorce comes through.
If the child is eligible for support and not receiving it, yes. The money will go to reimburse the state for your medical expenses and those of the child.
Yes, if the mother is on Medicaid the insurance will cover the cost of the hospital bills in full. If the mother is not married to the father the state will come after the father for the expenses to reimburse the cost of the birth.
The parents of the deceased father (the childs grandparents) can do a paternity test.
No
A parent who is TANF eligible should not have to pay child support.
If your child is at the age of 2 or older and still on medicaid THEN the father is put on child support by the state.
If your father in law shows the rent you are paying as an income in his tax returns, YES you are eligible If your father in law is not showing the rent you are paying as an income in his tax returns, NO you are NOT eligible