Health Care Reform Debate Roiled by Concerns Over Coverage for Undocumented Immigrants

Health Care Reform Debate Roiled by Concerns Over Coverage for Undocumented Immigrants

Immigration attorney Sonal Ambegaokar, Anthony Cava of DHCS, Kathleen King of the Santa Clara Family Health Foundation and Yeh Ling-Ling of Alliance for a Sustainable USA discussed the debate with California Healthline.

As Congress moves forward with various health care reform proposals, debate is heating up over whether the plans will cover health services for undocumented immigrants.

California has about three million undocumented immigrants, or about one-quarter of the U.S. total. The state currently spends about 3% of its $40 billion Medi-Cal budget on health services for undocumented residents.

Although state and federal regulations exclude undocumented residents from certain health care programs, local governments often offer services that cover a broader group of residents, including undocumented immigrants.

In a California Healthline Special Report by Deirdre Kennedy, experts discussed the costs and benefits of extending health coverage to undocumented immigrants.

The Special Report includes comments from:

Some advocates say Congress should address immigration issues separately from health care reform (Kennedy, California Healthline, 9/29).

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