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CalMatters

Central Valley GOP Backs Health Care for Undocumented, Highlighting Changing California Politics

Two California lawmakers publicly blew up at each other earlier this month, hitting a nerve on an issue that has long-divided the state’s elected leaders: Whether and how much to offer government-subsidized health benefits to undocumented residents. Just 20 years ago, “in the early 2000s, the idea of offering this benefit was considered political suicide for both Democrats and Republicans,” said Arturo Vargas Bustamante, faculty research director at the UCLA Latino Policy and Politics Institute.

Arturo Vargas Bustamante
WHYY

Navigating language and cultural barriers to access health care

Language barriers like these can lead to serious medical mistakes. They’re also hurdles for people who don’t speak English efficiently trying to access basic health care ... research shows that as the Latino population continues to increase in California, the number of Latino physicians who are culturally competent and speak Spanish is not meeting the demand. Arturo Vargas Bustamante, a health policy professor at UCLA’s School of Public Health, co-authored a report on this issue, The Latino Physician Crisis. 

Arturo Vargas Bustamante
KQED

California Grapples with Primary Care Provider Shortage

About a third of Californians live in areas where there is a shortage of primary care providers, according to the California Healthcare Foundation. The shortage is particularly acute in rural areas and in the rapidly growing Inland Empire, which has only about 40 primary care physicians per 100,000 people. For patients, a short supply of doctors can mean months-long waits for appointments and more trips to urgent care for chronic conditions. And for in-demand providers, burnout looms. We’ll learn about plans to address the shortage and hear about your experiences finding a primary care

Arturo Vargas Bustamante
mHealth Intelligence

mHealth Intelligence

The UCLA Latino Policy and Politics Institute conducted a study that shows healthcare disparities linked to telehealth use during the COVID-19 pandemic resulted from race, age, language, and technology access barriers.

Arturo Vargas Bustamante
mHealth Intelligence

Race, Age, Languare Barriers Fuel Telehealth Delivery Disparities

The UCLA Latino Policy and Politics Institute conducted a study that shows healthcare disparities linked to telehealth use during the COVID-19 pandemic resulted from race, age, language, and technology access barriers.

Arturo Vargas Bustamante
UCLA Newsroom

Telehealth, key part of pandemic-era care, should be more accessible for more patients

A study by the UCLA Latino Policy and Politics Institute found that since COVID-19 emerged, language barriers have prevented Latino and Asian patients in Los Angeles from making full use of telehealth services.

Arturo Vargas Bustamante
USA Today

Disastrous consequences': Anti-abortion laws could make undocumented women more vulnerable

Arturo Vargas Bustamante, a senior fellow at the University of California, Los Angeles’ Center for Health Policy Research, said ensuring undocumented women have access to telehealth services and are able to obtain abortion pills at a low cost could be a solution. But he said health organizations will need to work hard to win the trust of these women, who might fear their information will land in the hands of law enforcement and be used to deport them. "We need to use trusting voices in the community to make undocumented women trust that potential of telehealth services," said Vargas Bustamante

Arturo Vargas Bustamante
California Healthline

California opens Medicaid to Older Unauthorized Immigrants

In addition to the current law, all immigrants without papers who meet the financial criteria can obtain a limited coverage of Medi-Cal, which includes emergency and embarrassment services and, in some cases, long-term attention. “It’s a key moment, when fours are incorporating all these undocumented immigrants who have advanced to the medical attention system,” said Arturo Vargas Bustamante, professor of politics and health management at the School of Public Health at Fielding. If you have extended your chronic, dice attachments, they will simply end up in the emergency room and will be more

Arturo Vargas Bustamante
The Los Angeles Times

Op-Ed: Cuts to COVID relief programs are coming. Once again Latinos will bear the brunt of the effect

Even without the cuts to COVID spending by the government, it is important to determine what policy responses are needed federally and in California to address the health inequities Latinos and other people of color face, all of which were made worse by the pandemic. We need to prevent these injustices from reoccurring should there be a new COVID-19 surge, or in the inevitable case of a new pandemic.

Arturo Vargas Bustamante
CalMatters

As California expands Medi-Cal, hundreds of thousands of immigrants will still be left behind

“This is a great achievement and it is absolutely amazing, but there will still be some who will remain uninsured,” said Arturo Vargas Bustamante, health policy professor at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health. “It’s not universal health care, but the situation for many immigrants in California will be much better.”

In 2023, after Medi-Cal expands to cover undocumented immigrants 50 and older, about 3.2 million people will remain uninsured in California, according to researchers at the UC Berkeley Labor Center and the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research. Of those, 1.16 million will

California Simulation of Insurance Markets (CalSIM)
Arturo Vargas Bustamante