In Michigan, immigrants have to wait years for public health insurance. That's about to change.
A few years ago,
The family was struggling. They were navigating life in an entirely new country and were trying to access health care for their child while uninsured. No matter where they turned, they faced barrier after barrier. Devastated, they were told: You have to wait.You and your child won't be able to receive public health insurance for another five years.
"You can imagine the anguish of being in a new country, having a child with a chronic condition and knocking on every door and being told to wait five years," said Reed, whose organization provides legal resources to immigrants across
The reason the family had to wait five years to receive public health insurance – which includes Medicaid and
The "Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996" – which was sponsored by former
You can imagine the anguish of being in a new country, having a child with a chronic condition and knocking on every door and being told to wait five years. A child with juvenile diabetes cannot wait five years.
–
As part of the changes enacted in 1996, it became federal law that legal non-citizens – immigrants who are living in the
In 2009, the
Now, 14 years after the law was enacted,
The omnibus general government budget, which is expected to soon be signed by Gov.
Whitmer's budget proposed in February included
When asked to comment on the Medicaid policy change, Whitmer spokesperson
"Prioritizing the health and well-being of every Michigander ensures our state has a strong and healthy workforce and attracts workers and businesses to our state," LaRouche continued. "That's why the governor has focused on expanding reproductive care for women, including funding her Healthy Moms, Healthy Babies initiative, which aims to reduce the disproportionate racial impacts of maternal and infant mortality and improve care.
Eliminating the five-year period is expected to impact about 4,000 children and thousands of pregnant people in
"We're really excited to see this made it fully through," Marshall-Shah said. "It will reduce the rate of uninsured among non-citizens.
"These are children and families and adults who have lived in our country for years and are otherwise income eligible [for Medicaid]," he continued.
In
Since the 1996 law went into effect, immigrants in
"The complicated way that being a non-citizen affects eligibility for public programs and benefits is something that's not well understood by the public," Reed said. "If you're a green card holder, who does it benefit to leave people without primary care? It's a tremendously impractical policy."
But this policy has meant that, for decades now, immigrant children and families have not been accessing the care that they need – which, Marshall-Shah said, can lead to more serious health diagnoses and significant financial strain.
"Children are postponing well visit checks; they're not getting conditions diagnosed because they're not going to the doctor," Marshall-Shah said. "For adults, it means only seeing a doctor if there's an acute care need.
"People who are able to get their health care needs met early will be treated earlier, diseases won't progress, and they won't have to utilize the emergency room, which is very expensive," he continued.
Additionally, accessing care at emergency rooms is not sustainable when it comes to addressing health needs, Reed noted.
"You can't go to an emergency room and get insulin every day," Reed said.
Though the impending change regarding the five-year waiting period is "really important" for thousands of
"We want to get all people covered in
The 2009 law permits states to waive the five-year waiting period for Medicaid for children up to the age of 21 and pregnant people, but it does not allow them to eliminate the requirement for other adults.
At the federal level, there are attempts to expand access to public benefits for non-citizens. This year,
While the policy change in
"We want new immigrant families to thrive," Reed said. "Anything we can do to make access to something as basic as health care – both primary care and more complicated levels of care – for kids who are just starting their new lives in the
It also begins to rectify federal policies rooted in "the desire to divest in families and children of color," which is in part why the 1996 welfare reform legislation passed, Reed said.
Still, Reed added, much more needs to be done to address racism within the country's immigration system.
"We still live in an environment where the narrative that immigrants are getting things that others are not getting is generally being stoked," Reed said. "Our presidential politics and national conversation is still very basic about who's taking and who's deserving and it's just not reality-based when it comes to what immigrants contribute."
Marshall-Shah said the Medicaid change in
Both Marshall-Shah and Reed noted that this policy change will likely retain and draw families – something that will help to address the population decline that
"We're talking about how to increase population here in
Right now, Reed said
"I frequently get calls from colleagues; they want to bring their husband's parents from
GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
SUBSCRIBE
The post In Michigan, immigrants have to wait years for public health insurance. That's about to change. appeared first on Michigan Advance.
’Red flags on top of red flags’: Problems mount for UM athletics booster John Ruiz [Miami Herald]
Everything old is new again? The latest round of health policy proposals reprises existing ideas
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News