Hispanic immigrants face health care hurdles
Affordable insurance remains out of reach for those lacking citizenship
Cecilia Ramirez is worried about her weight and troubling symptoms that hint of diabetes, but she won't seek medical help because she can't afford it.
“I don't go to the doctor when I'm sick — it's too expensive,” she said.
Though she works in sales at an insurance agency in Highlandtown, an East Baltimore neighborhood that has seen an influx of Hispanic immigrants in recent years, Ramirez, 23, has no health insurance.
Her predicament is shared by thousands of Hispanic immigrants in East Baltimore, and millions nationally, who cannot afford regular medical services and are uninsured because they lack the benefits attached to legal U.S. residency and citizenship.
Ramirez's parents came illegally to the U.S. from Mexico when she was 10. Her immigration status now — “lawfully present” — allows her to work and study here without fear of deportation, but she has no path to citizenship. She is ineligible for health coverage under the Affordable Care Act or any public insurance program. The Supreme Court's order last week in a related immigration case did not change this.
Her $23,000 annual income would easily qualify her for Medicaid, but only her two young children can get it. Ramirez's employer can't afford to offer her private health insurance, and even if it did, she doubts she could afford it.
Latino immigrants ,uninsured or not, face many challenges when it comes to finding medical care. Many have trouble communicating in English, are poor and undereducated, or lack easy access to transportation to get to and from doctors or clinic appointments. Others come from cultures where health care is a luxury they don't regularly seek out.
But the inability of noncitizens to join affordable health plans remains the primary stumbling block.
“What we're seeing across the country is that the undocumented are one of the most vulnerable groups out there when it comes to insurability,” said Steven Lopez, manager of the health policy project at the National Council of La Raza, the largest Latino advocacy group in the U.S. “The opportunity to get regular health care is the key to finding greater opportunity. If you don't have your health, you're not going to progress in life.”
Nationwide, more than 5 million people living in the U.S. illegally are without medical coverage, with indications that most are Hispanic, according to an Urban Institute report released in March. Nearly half of the estimated 11 million living in the U.S. illegally are uninsured, compared with 10.5 percent of U.S. citizens and roughly 15 percent of noncitizens living here legally, the report noted. Hispanic adults' uninsured rate fell to 28 percent last year — 13 percentage points below 2013 — but remains far higher than those of non-Hispanic whites, blacks and Asians, according to federal statistics released in May.
“This is the tricky part for us,” said Dr. Leana Wen, Baltimore's health commissioner. “The Affordable Care Act excludes these individuals” who are living in the U.S. without permission. “They fall through the cracks.”
They have done so even as Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake works to draw more immigrants here in the hope they will repopulate hollowed out inner-city blocks. Latinos, who figure prominently in the mayor's drive to recruit 10,000 new families, continue to filter into several older East Baltimore neighborhoods, including Fells Point, Greektown, Highlandtown and Patterson Park.
Baltimore's population includes around 30,000 Latinos, up from just 9,000 15 years ago, city officials say. Medical providers and Latino advocates say that 40 percent to 60 percent of them are here illegally, a range close to the Urban Institute's national estimates.
Health is a major concern. Baltimore Latinos are twice as likely as non-Latinos to say they have poor or fair health, according to a 2011 city health department survey.
There is insufficient data to make judgments about the health of the city's Latinos or compare them to other groups. But cardiovascular disease and cancer were the two leading causes of death among the city's Latinos in 2012, according to a 2014 Baltimore City Health Department report. Unintentional injury and chronic liver disease or cirrhosis tied for the fourth leading cause of death among the city's Latinos, but they were much less common among white and black populations, the report found.
“People can start businesses and buy homes, but they can't get medical insurance,” said David Rosario, who serves as board president for the Latino Providers Network, an advocacy organization that links Hispanics to social services.
As a result, health providers say that when they see people come into their offices or clinics, they are often in advanced stages of illness.
“Typically, we see a lot of diabetes and obesity-related diseases, like high blood pressure,” said Kathleen Page, an infectious disease specialist at Johns Hopkins Hospital and a co-founder of Centro SOL, a Hopkins Bayview Medical Center clinic and outreach program that treats Hispanic clients at reduced prices. Baltimore Latinos suffer higher rates of those disorders despite being younger as a group than the rest of the city's population. Chronic infections and mental health problems such as anxiety and depression run rampant, Page added.
Latinos' ability to find treatment is tied directly to their immigration status.
Some people in the U.S. illegally can get their hospital bills for baby deliveries paid by Emergency Medicaid. Federally qualified health clinics offer basic medical care to thousands of the uninsured at reduced rates, with no questions asked about status, but the federal government offers no insurance options for those living in the U.S. without permission.
Meanwhile, Ramirez's children, Jenny, 7, and Kimberly, 3, receive insurance through Medicaid. Because they were born in the U.S. and are American citizens, they meet Medicaid's eligibility standards and are able to get medical care paid for by the federally funded program.
As a foreign-born child of immigrants who entered the U.S. without permission, Ramirez's access to health care is problematic.
She applied for and received “lawfully present” status under a 2012 Obama administration policy that allowed people who arrived in the U.S. before age 16 and are now under age 35 to work and study in the U.S. without fearing deportation. Some 665,000 others also received such status nationwide, according to figures from the Department of Homeland Security.
But they were excluded from getting health insurance under the Affordable Care Act by a related policy of the Department of Health and Human Services. Some states, including California and New York, have softened their standards and enrolled some people living in the country illegally in Medicaid. But nationally, most remain without coverage.
To help people like Ramirez and other low-income people living here illegally, several institutions in East Baltimore have cobbled together an array of medical services outside of typical hospital settings. Baltimore City, Johns Hopkins Bayview, two federally subsidized clinics and one charity-run clinic offer bilingual interpreters, health providers who speak Spanish and, perhaps most importantly, low fees and sliding scales for care.
The Access Partnership, or TAP, a Johns Hopkins charitable program, offers diagnostic tests and visits to specialists for very low fees, usually no more than $20. More than 90 percent of the people the program serves are Hispanic, and none are asked about their immigration status, said Barbara Cook, the group's medical director.
Cecilia Ramirez's mother got diagnostic tests and subsequent surgery a little over a year ago to remove her uterus with help from TAP. Nonetheless, Ramirez wonders if the outcome would have been better if she had gotten help earlier.
“If she had had insurance, she might have sought out care, instead of having to wait so long that they had to remove part of her body,” she said.