The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga. health sign-ups focus on Hispanics

Latinos remain the least-insured major American ethnic group.

- By Ariel Hart ahart@ajc.com

On a sunny, cold Sunday in November, Victoria Laverde walked up to an informatio­n table at Plaza Las Americas in Lilburn and asked for federal help in signing up for health insurance under the Affordable Care Act.

It’s exactly what officials under the Trump administra­tion hoped would happen when they made big changes to funding for ACA navigation. The government has made news as it stripped down the grant money, reducing Georgia’s enrollment navigator funding to $499,995, down from $1.4 million last year and $3.7 million in 2016. It’s virtually eliminated advertisin­g, and it fired the major statewide nonprofits that used to be navigators. But with the remaining money, it made a bold choice.

Now, under the blessing of the Trump administra­tion, Georgia’s navigator is a group that focuses on immigrants, and strongly on the Latino population.

The administra­tion has now directed navigators to target population­s “left behind” by previous marketing for the ACA, also known as Obamacare. Hispanics, who make up 9.6 percent of Georgia’s population, remain the least-insured major American ethnic group. And Latinos in Georgia, according to 2016 U.S. Census Bureau figures, are more likely to be uninsured than they are in any other state.

Georgia Refugee Health and Mental Health, the new and only statewide navigator, has long been an ACA navigator organizati­on in the past, but never with this much money or this much focus on the Hispanic population. This year’s grant more than triples what the federal government budgeted for the group last year. It exceeds by more than $100,000 any grant

it ever received for navigation, even in the flush Obama years. In addition to its focus, Georgia Refugee Health and Mental Health is expected to do the job previous navigators did with the entire state population.

The director in charge of the group says the strategy is working.

“Pe o p l e are making appointmen­ts both in English and in Spanish and wanting informatio­n,” said Kathleen Connors, the director of GRHMH and its new navigator arms, ObamacareP­araLatinos.org and HealthCare­GA.org.

“I had wanted to move into the Hispanic community,” she said on the day she first learned her organizati­on was awarded the grant. “Millions of dollars have been spent in the state of Georgia. The people who were suppos- edly doing it weren’t mak- ing a dent.”

Whether the Latino pop- ulation here was really “left behind” may depend on perspectiv­e. The rate of uninsured Hispanic people in Georgia is still very high, at 27 percent as of 2016. But that’s down from 44 percent in 2013, the year the ACA kicked in, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.

“I don’t know what the term ‘left behind’ means,” said Samantha Artiga, a researcher on Latino enroll- ment at the Kaiser Family Foundation. Across the natio n , “the uninsured rate for Hispanics significan­tly dropped,” she said. But, she added, they were starting from a significan­tly higher uninsured rate, so they’re still left with a long ways to go.

To be sure, the problem is not eligibilit­y. Of those unin- sured Hispanics, nearly half are U.S.-born citizens. Many more are naturalize­d citizens or have met requiremen­ts through their residency.

Everyone who spoke for this story who has worked with the population said the reasons for the lag are many and strong.

“The people need to know what this insurance is about,” said Liseth Fernandez, a navigator at that informatio­n table at Plaza Las Americas. “Sometimes Latin peo- ple are behind because they don’t speak English. Or peo- ple may think it’s not true” — a scam — “or think it’s too expensive.”

Those are things naviga- tion, especially in a person’s native language, can fix.

But another big reason, they said, was fear that an eli- gible person applying would lead to that person’s relatives being targeted in case they’re unauthoriz­ed immigrants.

That’s not supposed to happen, by federal rules, officials said. But the cur- rent administra­tion’s focus on immigratio­n has raised fears even for citizens and those here legally, they said. That ramped up after the administra­tion proposed an order penalizing immigrant applicants if they took federal benefits they shouldn’t.

“Even though there are policies in place” to prevent one family member’s insur- ance sign-up from being used to track down another, unauthoriz­ed family member, said the researcher, Artiga, “I think there’s just so much fear and uncertaint­y — and it’s really ramped up — that I think families are just really wary of participat­ing.”

Fred Ammons, who heads Community Health Works, the parent organizati­on of the previous statewide navigator in Georgia, Insure Georgia, said it had made an important dent in the Hispanic uninsured population before it lost the grant this year. But the population includes people with specific challenges for health insurance, such as people who migrate from state to state for farm work, which makes insurance enrollment a mess. He notes that “dreamers,” people who were brought illegally to the U.S. as children but were raised here, are not eligible for ACA coverage even if they pay full price without subsidies.

For Laverde, an office worker, that’s not a problem. The Marietta resident is a U.S. citizen who spent years in her family’s home country of Colombia and just returned here in July. She tried enrolling on the federal marketplac­e website, health care.gov, directly but found it “crazy” and confusing. She was relieved to find the navigators’ table because she’s uninsured right now and is glad it won’t stay that way.

“It’s horrible. It’s very scary,” she said. “I have a 12-year-old. It’s really, really weird that you don’t have protection just for emergencie­s.”

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER / SPECIAL ?? Viviana Cossio (left) talks to a shopper about enrolling in health insurance under the Affordable Care Act on Nov. 3 at Santa Fe Mall in Duluth. Latinos are the least-insured major American ethnic group.
STEVE SCHAEFER / SPECIAL Viviana Cossio (left) talks to a shopper about enrolling in health insurance under the Affordable Care Act on Nov. 3 at Santa Fe Mall in Duluth. Latinos are the least-insured major American ethnic group.

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