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California Opens Medicaid to Older Unauthorized Immigrants

California Opens Medicaid to Older Unauthorized Immigrants

Alina Arzola, a 64-year-old unauthorized immigrant, receives primary care at St. Luke鈥檚 Family Practice in Modesto, California. Arzola is nervous about signing up for Medi-Cal, fearing she won鈥檛 be able to get quality care. (Heidi de Marco/KHN)

On May 1, California opened Medi-Cal to older immigrants residing in the state without legal permission.

Unauthorized immigrants who fall below certain income thresholds are now eligible for full coverage by Medi-Cal, California鈥檚 version of Medicaid, the federal-state partnership that provides health insurance to low-income people.

Unauthorized immigrants of all ages account for 40% of the state鈥檚 uninsured residents. Official estimates put the number of newly eligible people . Those who sign up will join unauthorized immigrants ages 25 and under already enrolled in Medi-Cal.

And if Gov. Gavin Newsom gets his way, which seems entirely plausible considering the state鈥檚 , California could allow all remaining low-income unauthorized immigrants 鈥 people 鈥 to join Medi-Cal by 2024, or sooner.

As I have , Medi-Cal has some well-known problems. But it is still far better than no insurance at all. Read on to learn about the new benefits and how you can enroll if you are eligible.

Under current law, all unauthorized immigrants who meet the financial criteria can get limited Medi-Cal coverage, including emergency and pregnancy services and, in some cases, long-term care. But when they sign up for full Medi-Cal, they get that includes primary care, prescription drugs, mental health care, dental and eye care, eyeglasses, and much more. That鈥檚 no small thing for people who are getting gray.

鈥淭his is a key moment when you want to incorporate all these aging undocumented immigrants into the health care system,鈥 says Arturo Vargas Bustamante, a professor of health policy and management at UCLA鈥檚 Fielding School of Public Health. If you let their chronic conditions go unattended, he says, they鈥檒l just end up in the emergency room and be more expensive to treat.

He calls it 鈥渁 responsible way of investing.鈥

As Bustamante points out, it鈥檚 no longer the case that immigrants come to work temporarily in the United States and then return to their home countries. They are staying, raising families, and growing old in this country. And unauthorized immigrants play an important role in the labor force, paying an estimated in state and local taxes a year in California and $11.7 billion nationally. Nobody benefits if they鈥檙e too sick to work.

While it will take time to roll out the new benefits, the task will be made easier by the fact that the of unauthorized immigrants who will become eligible for full coverage are already signed up for limited Medi-Cal benefits 鈥 so the state has contact information for them.

Those already in limited Medi-Cal will be automatically upgraded to full-scope Medi-Cal. Assuming their contact details are current, they will receive packets in the mail explaining their expanded benefits and prompting them to choose a health plan and a primary care provider.

鈥淲e expect to see people who are already enrolled in restricted-scope Medi-Cal go into full-scope Medi-Cal right away,鈥 says Ronald Coleman, managing director of policy at the California Pan-Ethnic Health Network, a nonprofit that promotes health access for communities of color. 鈥淭he question is: Will they understand their benefits and know how to navigate the system?鈥

Those who are not signed up for restricted Medi-Cal may not be easily identified and, given cultural and language barriers, could be difficult to convince.

The Department of Health Care Services, which administers Medi-Cal, is working with county officials, consumer advocates, and the state health insurance exchange, , to reach eligible immigrants. It has published notices with in multiple languages. And the agency has an 鈥渙lder adult expansion鈥 page on its website, available in and .

Advocates have also been gearing up. The California Pan-Ethnic Health Network, for example, is sponsoring legislation, , which would direct $30 million to community groups to conduct outreach and enrollment for people in underserved communities who are eligible for Medi-Cal. A similar program expires in June. Separately, the network is seeking an additional $15 million specifically for unauthorized adult immigrants, says Monika Lee, a spokesperson for the organization.

Soon, Alina Arzola won鈥檛 be able to get care from St. Luke鈥檚 Family Practice because the clinic can鈥檛 provide free treatment to people who can obtain affordable insurance. Arzola is eligible for Medi-Cal starting May 1. (Heidi de Marco/KHN)

Even as advocates and health officials spread the word about the new eligibility rules, they expect to encounter deep distrust from immigrants who vividly remember the Trump administration鈥檚 public charge rule, which stoked fear that applying for public benefits might harm their immigration status or even lead to deportation. With elections looming, many fear those days are not entirely in the past.

鈥淲hat advocates are trying to do on the ground is explain what county offices do with their information. It鈥檚 not shared with immigration,鈥 says Tiffany Huyenh-Cho, a senior attorney at . 鈥淲e鈥檙e really trying to allay some of those concerns people still have.鈥

Modesto resident Alina Arzola, a 64-year-old unauthorized immigrant who came from Guanajuato, Mexico, says she is not afraid of the immigration police. She is hesitant to sign up for Medi-Cal for a different reason: She fears the quality of the care is not very good.

鈥淓conomically, perhaps it would help me,鈥 she says. But she says she has not heard good things from her 87-year-old mother, who is a U.S. citizen and a Medi-Cal enrollee. In December 2020, her mom had surgery scheduled to remove her cataracts. It was all confirmed, Arzola recalls, but when her mom arrived, the doctor wasn鈥檛 there. He never showed up.

Arzola, who has diabetes, gets primary care at , a clinic in Modesto that treats uninsured people at no charge. But the clinic is not allowed to provide free care to people who are able to obtain affordable insurance 鈥 and that means that Arzola will soon no longer be able to go to the clinic, which she deeply regrets.

So she will likely bite the bullet and sign up for Medi-Cal.

鈥淚鈥檓 sure it wouldn鈥檛 be convenient for me to be without medical care,鈥 Arzola says, 鈥渟o I don鈥檛 have any alternative.鈥

The Department of Health Care Services and other resources are available to help you or a loved one learn about the new Medi-Cal benefits for older immigrants, including how to sign up and how to choose a health plan and provider.

The Health Consumer Alliance (888鈥804鈥3536 or ) provides free consultations and has offices across the state. It also has a 鈥 available in English, Spanish, Vietnamese, and multiple other languages 鈥 that explains the Medi-Cal expansion to older adults. It provides contact information for enrollment, whether through your county welfare office, Covered California, or your local community clinic.

The Latino Coalition for a Healthy California (916-448-3234 or ) offers a and fact sheets in English and Spanish. The advocacy groups Health Access and the California Immigrant Policy Center have put out a joint FAQ in and .

This story was produced by , which publishes , an editorially independent service of the .