Summary
Summary: This report updates the Public Policy Institute of California’s past work on health care and insurance coverage for undocumented immigrants, from presenting updated uninsured rates among immigrant groups to unpacking systematic differences in health care access by documentation status. Authors also examine aspects of how children in mixed-status families — where at least one member is undocumented — engage with the health care system.
Findings: Situating these topics amid the shifting federal and state contexts of the past five years, including the pandemic, authors found that:
- Uninsured rates are high for low-income undocumented immigrants. Uninsured rates for those older than 50 are especially concerning given higher levels of health care need.
- The health care safety net serving undocumented immigrants is uneven across geography, by age group, and in some cases by health needs.
- Undocumented immigrants and their family members do not use more emergency department services than other immigrants; lack of connections to the health care system is a greater concern.
- Children in families with at least one undocumented member are almost 11 percent less likely to have a usual source of care compared to children in other immigrant families, although they get health care at similar rates.
Authors discuss possible options to improve access to health insurance coverage and medical care for undocumented immigrants and their families, including expanding access to low-income health programs to all adults regardless of citizenship, incentivizing all counties to serve undocumented immigrants in their programs for the medically indigent, and increasing supports for safety net providers.
This report uses 2015–2019 California Health Interview Survey (CHIS) data.
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