PolitiFact is an independent fact-checking organization dedicated to helping the public sort fact from fiction in American politics. Teen Vogue has teamed up with PolitiFact to bring rigorously fact-checked information to Teen Vogue readers. To submit a claim that you think PolitiFact should check, click here.

This week, Senate Republicans faced widespread criticism for their revised version of the GOP healthcare plan, which would insure far fewer people than the current Affordable Healthcare Act. White House counselor Kellyanne Conway lied about the bill during in an interview on ABC's "This Week with George Stephanopoulos," on Sunday by claiming that it does not include sweeping cuts to Medicaid — though it does.

Although the bill may not immediately slash Medicaid’s budget, the proposals would slow the rate of Medicaid spending and change policies so that fewer people would be eligible for Medicaid. That’s a cut. Experts told Politifact it would also be extremely difficult for people who became Medicaid recipient’s under AHA to be “godfathered in” to the new system, which Conway promised during her Sunday interview.

These days, it’s hard to tell when this administration is lying or telling the truth. President Donald Trump himself repeatedly spreads misinformation about health insurance. (On June 30, Trump tweeted that perhaps Senate Republicans should repeal Obama's healthcare plan now, then replace it later.) We’ve teamed up with Politifact to break down what the Trump administration gets wrong about healthcare. Here are the biggest lies the White House told about healthcare since February:

1. Trump claimed the GOP proposal actually increases Medicaid spending, even though the bill makes deep cuts.

On Wednesday, Trump responded to the Senate controversy by tweeting that Medicaid coverage “actually goes up” under the proposed GOP health care plan. However, the Washington Post reported the increase in literal dollars budgeted does not account for rising costs, population growth, inflation and the shrinking number of Americans actually eligible for Medicaid coverage. Without context, the numerical graph Trump included in his tweet paint a distorted picture.

The Congressional Budget Office predicted that by 2026 two-thirds of the 15 million newly uninsured Americans would be that way because of cuts in the Medicaid program.

We rate this claim half-false.

2. Sean Spicer tweeted that 28.2 million uninsured Americans are still waiting for Obamacare, which omits crucial context.

Press secretary Sean Spicer tweeted that 28.2 million Americans are still uninsured, despite the ACA. We checked the National Center for Health Statistics and found that 28.2 million people were indeed uninsured as of 2016. We also found, however, that the tweet neglects to show the full picture.

Spicer’s talking point misrepresents the facts by omitting important context. It ignores that this rate of uninsured Americans is actually a historic low in the United States. Far more people are covered by “Obamacare” than the Trump administration admits.

For example, the official White House Twitter account claimed on June 21 that “Obamacare led to higher costs and fewer health insurance options for millions of Americans.”

This is wrong. A 2016 estimate from the U.S. Health and Human Services Department put the number of people who gained coverage at 20 million. That included 2.3 million young adults who took advantage of a provision in the law that allowed them to stay on their parents’ plans until they turned 26. The remaining 17.7 million got coverage through either a private plan or public insurance, primarily Medicaid.

"Americans inherently have more access to care then they did before Obamacare," said Timothy Callaghan, a health policy professor at the Texas A&M School of Public Health.