New
York City to offer low-cost healthcare to uninsured
immigrants
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[October 09, 2015]
NEW YORK (Reuters) - New York will
become one of the first major U.S. cities to expand low-cost healthcare
to uninsured immigrants regardless of their legal status under a pilot
program to launch next spring, Mayor Bill de Blasio said on Thursday.
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The pilot, called Direct Access, will initially apply to 1,000
immigrants. Some of them are in the country legally but still
ineligible for support under the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act, popularly known as Obamacare. The program is
expected to expand in the following years.
“The City’s actions today are the first step in our efforts to
develop a fully inclusive health care system that protects all of
our residents, regardless of immigration status,” Nisha Agarwal,
commissioner of the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs, said in a
statement.
New York, with the largest foreign-born population of any U.S. city,
is following similar immigrant healthcare models enacted in San
Francisco and Los Angeles.
Under the Direct Access program, which will cost $6 million to
launch, the city will create a network of primary and preventative
healthcare providers specifically for uninsured and low-income
immigrants.
Many of the city's uninsured immigrants currently seek healthcare at
an emergency facility and have access to little preventative care, a
spokeswoman with the mayor's office said. Many of them lack primary
doctors.
Immigrants in New York have been discouraged from seeking primary or
preventative healthcare for reasons including costly services and
language barriers, according to a de Blasio-appointed task force.
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In an effort to remove some of the barriers, the city's
immigrant-focused healthcare network will also provide information
in more languages and conduct public outreach and education on the
new program to immigrants.
(Reporting by Laila Kearney; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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