Dayton Daily News

Rise in uninsured may be linked to immigrants’ fears

- By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

Hispanics were the only major racial and ethnic category with a significan­t increase in their uninsured rate. It rose by 1.6 percentage points in 2018, with nearly 18% lacking coverage.

— When the WASHINGTON

Census Bureau reported an increase in the number of people without health insurance in America, it sent political partisans reaching for talking points on the Obamaera health law and its travails. But the new numbers suggest that fears of the Trump administra­tion’s immigratio­n crackdown may be a more significan­t factor in the slippage.

Overall, the number of uninsured in the U.S. rose by 1.9 million people in 2018, the agency report this past week. It was the first jump in nearly a decade. An estimated 27.5 million people, or 8.5% of the population, lacked coverage the entire year. Such increases are considered unusual in a strong economy.

The report showed that a drop in low-income people enrolled in Medicaid was the most significan­t factor behind the higher number of uninsured people.

Hispanics were the only major racial and ethnic category with a significan­t increase in their uninsured rate. It rose by 1.6 percentage points in 2018, with nearly 18% lacking coverage. There was no significan­t change in health insurance for non-Hispanic whites, blacks and Asians.

“Some of the biggest declines in coverage are coming among Latinos and noncitizen­s,” said Larry Levitt of the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation, who tracks trends in health insurance coverage. “These declines in coverage are coming at a time when the Trump administra­tion has tried to curb immigratio­n and discourage immigrants from using public benefits like Medicaid.”

Health care is a defining issue for Democrats vying for their party’s 2020 presidenti­al nomination. Candidates wasted no time in Thursday’s debate highlighti­ng the split between progressiv­es such as Sens. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren , who favor a government-run system for all, including people without legal permission to be in the country, and moderates like former Vice President Joe Biden. He supports building on the Affordable Care Act and adding a new public plan option, open to U.S. citizens and legal residents.

Although the candidates did not dwell on the uninsured rate, Democratic congressio­nal leaders have said the census figures show the administra­tion’s “sabotage” of the Obama health law.

The administra­tion issued a statement blaming the law’s high premiums, unaffordab­le for solid middle-class people who do not qualify for financial assistance. “The reality is we will continue to see the number of uninsured increase until we address the underlying issues in Obamacare that have failed the American people,” the statement said.

While the report found an increase in the uninsured rate among solid middle-class people the Trump administra­tion wants to help, there was no significan­t change in employer coverage or in plans that consumers purchase directly. Those are the types of health insurance that middle-class workers tend to have. Other patterns in the data pointed to an immigratio­n link.

Health economist Richard Frank of Harvard Medical School said the data “suggest that we are dealing with immigratio­n ... potentiall­y in some unexpected ways.” Frank was a high-ranking health policy adviser in the Obama administra­tion.

The uninsured rate for foreign-born people, including those who have become U.S. citizens, also rose significan­tly, mirroring the shift among Hispanics.

Frank noted that immigrant families often include foreign-born and native-born relatives, “and you can imagine the new approach to immigratio­n inhibiting these people from doing things that would make them more visible to public authoritie­s,” such as applying for government health care programs.

Immigrants’ fears may also be part of the reason for a significan­t increase in the number of uninsured children in 2018, said Katherine Hempstead, a senior health policy expert with the nonpartisa­n Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, which works to expand coverage. Among immigrant children who have become citizens, the uninsured rate rose by 2.2 percentage points in 2018, to 8.6%. The increase was greater among kids who are not citizens.

“There are a lot of kids eligible for public coverage but not enrolled because of various things that make it less comfortabl­e for people to enroll in public coverage,” said Hempstead.

The administra­tion’s “public charge” regulation, which could deny green cards to migrants who use government benefits such as Medicaid was finalized this year. But other efforts to restrict immigratio­n, including family separation­s at the U.S.-Mexico border, were occurring in the period covered by the report.

“People are interpreti­ng ‘public charge’ broadly and even though their kids are eligible for Medicaid because they were born in this country, they are staying away,” said Hempstead. Children’s coverage often follows their parents’ status.

Other factors could also be affecting the numbers:

■ The report found a statistica­lly significan­t increase in solid middle-class people who are uninsured. Health care researcher and consultant Brian Blase, who until recently served as a White House adviser, said it appears to reflect people who cannot afford high ACA premiums.

■ Experts are debating the impact of a strong job market on the decline in Medicaid enrollment. It’s possible that some Medicaid recipients took jobs that boosted their earnings, making them ineligible for benefits.

 ?? RICHARD B. LEVINE/SIPA USA ?? The U.S. Census Bureau said there were 1.9 million more people who were uninsured in 2018, the first increase in that number in nearly a decade.
RICHARD B. LEVINE/SIPA USA The U.S. Census Bureau said there were 1.9 million more people who were uninsured in 2018, the first increase in that number in nearly a decade.

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