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California's expanded health coverage for immigrants collides with Medicaid reviews

Jasmine Aguilera, El Tímpano, KFF Health News on

Published in Health & Fitness

California was the first state to expand Medicaid eligibility to all qualified immigrants regardless of legal status, phasing it in over several years: children in 2016, young adults ages 19-26 in 2020, people 50 and older in 2022, and all remaining adults this year.

But California, like other states, resumed eligibility checks last April, and the process is expected to continue through May. The state is now seeing disenrollment rates return to pre-pandemic levels, or 19%-20% of the Medi-Cal population each year, according to DHCS.

Jane Garcia, CEO of La Clínica de La Raza, testified before the Alameda County Board of Supervisors’ health committee that disenrollments continue to pose a challenge just as her team tries to enroll newly eligible residents. “It’s a heck of a load on our staff,” she told supervisors in January.

Although many beneficiaries no longer qualify because their incomes rose, more have been dropped from the rolls for failing to respond to notices or return paperwork. Often, renewal packets were sent to old addresses. Many find out they’ve lost coverage only upon seeking medical care.

“They knew something was happening,” said Janet Anwar, eligibility manager at Tiburcio Vasquez Health Center in the East Bay. “They didn’t know exactly what it was, how it was gonna affect them until actually the day came and they were disenrolled. And they were getting checked in or scheduling an appointment, then, ‘Hey, you lost your coverage.’”

But reenrollment is a challenge. A state-sponsored survey published Feb. 12 by the California Health Care Foundation found 30% of Hispanic households tried but were unable to complete a renewal form, compared with 19% for white non-Hispanic households. And 43% of Hispanics reported they would like to restart Medi-Cal but did not know how, versus 32% of people in white non-Hispanic households.

 

The Abundis family is among those who don’t know where to get their questions answered. Though Abundis’ wife submitted the family’s Medi-Cal renewal paperwork in October, his wife and two children who still live with them were able to maintain coverage; Abundis was the only one dropped. He hasn’t received an explanation for being disenrolled nor been notified how to appeal or reapply. Now he worries he may not qualify on his own based on his roughly $36,000 annual income since the limit is $20,121 for an individual but $41,400 for a family of four.

It is likely an eligibility worker could check if he and his family qualify as a household or assist him with signing up for a private plan that can run less than $10 a month for premiums on Covered California. The health insurance exchange allows for special enrollment when people lose Medi-Cal or employer-based coverage. But Abundis assumes he won’t be able to afford premiums or copays, so he hasn’t applied.

Abundis, who first visited a doctor in May 2022 about unrelenting fatigue, constant pain in his back and knees, shortness of breath, and unexplained weight loss, worries he’s unable to afford medical care. La Clínica de La Raza, the community health clinic where he received blood testing, worked with him that day so he didn’t have to pay upfront, but he has since stopped seeking medical care.

More than a year after his diagnosis, Abundis still doesn’t know which stage cancer he has, or what his treatment plan should be. Though early cancer detection can lead to a higher chance of survival, some types of leukemia advance quickly. Without further testing, Abundis does not know his outlook.

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©2024 KFF Health News. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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