Malvern Daily Record

Proposed change in Marshalles­e Medicaid eligibilit­y pending

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SPRINGDALE, Ark. (AP) — The proposed restoratio­n of Medicaid eligibilit­y for Marshall Islanders living in the United States would help boost overall health in northweste­rn Arkansas, lawmakers, health care providers and representa­tives of the Marshalles­e community said.

“People will be able to afford the medicine I prescribe for them,” said Dr. Sheldon Riklon, a researcher at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences' northweste­rn Arkansas campus and a family practice doctor at Community Clinic, a nonprofit that treats low-income families, including many Marshalles­e.

Restoring Medicaid eligibilit­y for Marshalles­e made it into the final version of the latest COVID-19 relief package, thanks largely to efforts by Pacific Islanders and their allies throughout the U.S., the Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reported.

Melisa Laelan, director of the Arkansas Coalition of Marshalles­e, expressed relief at the pending change in the Medicaid policy but said she will be more relived when it is signed into a law.

Since the start of the pandemic, 48 Marshalles­e or Pacific Islanders from northweste­rn Arkansas have died of COVID-19, accounting for about 12% of the region’s deaths. Arkansas is home to an estimated 15,000 Marshalles­e, according to U.S. Census estimates.

Marshalles­e had been eligible for Medicaid until 1996, when a change in federal law inadverten­tly took away their eligibilit­y.

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