Half of California's undocumented
immigrants are impoverished: study
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[November 11, 2015]
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - About
half of California's undocumented immigrants are poor enough to qualify
for Medi-Cal, the state's insurance program for its poorest residents,
according to a new report.
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The study by the Public Policy Institute of California comes amid
ongoing discussion in the most populous U.S. state over how to pay
for healthcare for the estimated 60 percent of undocumented
immigrants who do not have insurance.
The report estimates that as many as three million undocumented
immigrants live in California, of whom 51 percent are impoverished.
A new law set to take effect next year that would allow the children
of some undocumented immigrants to apply for Medi-Cal if their
families make less annually than $33,500, or 138 percent of the
federal poverty level of about $24,000 per year for a family of
four.
But the state has yet to expand access to the federal Affordable
Care Act, commonly referred to as Obamacare, or Medi-Cal itself to
undocumented adults.
As a result, the San Francisco-based nonpartisan policy research
organization said that those who become ill wait until they are very
sick and then go to emergency rooms, so that it costs more to treat
them than it would if they had received regular preventive care.
"The undocumented rely largely on safety net service providers when
they need it. Community clinics and hospital emergency departments
are their main access to organized healthcare," said Shannon
McConville, a co-author of the report.
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Most impoverished undocumented families live in Southern California
and the San Joaquin Valley, the report said.
Readily available health services have been connected to lower
mortality rates, better employment results and better education
effects, the organization said.
(Reporting by Kayla Nick-Kearney; editing by Sharon Bernstein, G
Crosse)
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