Health coverage for immigrant children on the rise Health coverage for immigrant children on the rise
A small but growing number of states are extending government health benefits to children regardless of their immigration status.
Come January,
The change is costing the states millions of dollars. Although the federal government usually pays for at least half the cost of those programs, the states extending health benefits to children lacking permanent legal status do so without receiving any federal money.
Despite the cost, momentum is growing:
"They are kids living in
But no state led by
Some critics say the move unfairly rewards people living in the country illegally.
If taxpayers pay for health care for those here illegally, she wrote in an email, "in effect that is a subsidy to the employers of illegal workers, who can more easily get away with paying illegal workers below-subsistence wages, knowing that taxpayers will cover the gap between the low wages and what the workers need to support their families."
She added that by "offering these benefits, states are putting out the welcome mat for illegal immigrants, and citizens and legal immigrants have to foot the bill."
Supporters of extending coverage say such arguments lack compassion, depriving children of preventive health care, while ignoring public health lessons learned most recently during the COVID-19 pandemic. Assuring the health of immigrants, whether they are in the country legally or not, helps keep the overall population healthy.
"The fact that states independently are covering children is not necessarily based on politics but the realization that having a healthy population is a benefit to states themselves," said
According to a June report Lacarte authored, of the estimated 2.3 million foreign-born children under 19 years old who by family income were eligible for Medicaid or CHIP in 2019, 909,000 were barred from those programs as a result of their immigration status.
About 43% of them, or nearly 391,000, were uninsured, according to the institute. That compares with 6% of
In 1993,
In all of those states, each with Democratic-led legislatures, the bills often have been part of overall efforts to ensure that as many children in the state, immigrant or otherwise, have health insurance. Those actions include eliminating premiums, increasing income eligibility levels and lessening red tape in renewing coverage.
"We're trying to make sure all kids in
In
States also can seek federal matching Medicaid funds for emergency health care provided to children in families with low incomes regardless of their immigration status.
Carney, the
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