Title: Salud Migrante Proposals for integral health care
1Salud MigranteProposals for integral health care
Binacional Tecnical Group
2General Outline
- Conceptual framework, diagnosis and general
design - Miguel A. González Block
- Provision of services in the United States
- Anne Kaufmann Nolon
- Insurance options with managed care
- Manuel Navarro y Patrick Bucknum
3SALUD MIGRANTE Conceptual framework, diagnosis
and general design
Miguel Ángel González Block
4 Outline
- Background
- Diagnosis
- Proposal for Salud Migrante
- Conclusion and Next Steps
5Project Development
- INSP Mission
- To contribute to social equity by generating
knowledge and innovation in health systems - Working Program of the Center for Health Systems
Research - Vulnerable Population migrants
- Social health protection Seguro Popular
- Binational Forums in Health Policies Guadalajara,
October, 2006 - Los Angeles, October, 2007
BACKGROUND
6Project Formulation
- Objectives
- Diagnosis and identification of options for the
grand vision of Binational Insurance - Formation of a coalition to develop pilot
projects - Seed financing by the Ford Foundation
- June 2007 to April 2008
- Research Team
- INSP leadership, multi-institutional
participation - Researchers in Iowa and North Carolina
- Service providers in the States of Washington and
New York - Participation at the national level in Mexico
BACKGROUND
7Sample of Participating States
- Mexico
- Guanajuato
- Michoacán
- Puebla
- United States
- North Carolina
- Iowa
- New York
- Washington
BACKGROUND
8Methodology
BACKGROUND
- In-depth interviews
- Bibliographic review, narrative and summarized
- Participatory observation
- Consultations
- Technical validation
9Players to be interviewed
- High-level federal and state health and migration
officials - Insurance agencies
- Insurance regulators
- First-level health care providers
- Hospitals
- Community agencies for migrants and
protection/support - Financial intermediation agencies (BANSEFI)
- Agencies that protect migrants
- Federal (consulates, IME Institute of Mexicans
Abroad) - State (Mexican agencies in both countries)
- Community development and patrimonial migrant
initiatives
BACKGROUND
10Conceptual Framework
- Right to health
- Vulnerability and exclusion of migrants in both
countries - Mexico/US integral diagnosis
- Vision of migration and health policies
- Functional international integration of health
systems - Mexican government leadership
- Linking strengths
- Mexican public sector
- U.S. Non-profit, private sector
- Participation of migrant organizations in both
countries
BACKGROUND
112. DIAGNOSIS
12Dimension of the 11.8 million Mexican migrants in
the U.S.
- 11 of the population of Mexico
- 5.8 annual increase
- Bidirectional flow
- 700,000 leave Mexico
- 250,000 return
- 60 without documents
- 21 have U.S. Citizenship
- 56 without health insurance
DIAGNOSIS
13Reference population for binational insurance
- 11.8 million migrants
- 4.3 million offspring born in the U.S.
- 5.5 million dependents in Mexico
- 21.6 million in transnational
- communities
DIAGNOSIS
85 of the migrants send remittances to Mexico
14Migrants impact on the U.S. population without
health insurance
- Migrants (of any nationality) and their offspring
born in the U.S. make up - 32 of the total population without health
insurance (46 million) - 86 of the growth of the population without
health insurance - Mexican migrants make up 14 of the total number
of people in the U.S. without health insurance
DIAGNOSIS
15Importance of health insurance for migrants in
the U.S.
- The U.S. health system is the most expensive in
the world, representing 14 of the GDP - 5.6 of hospital costs in the U.S. end up as
uncompensated debts - This is attributed to the population without
health insurance, mainly migrants - It represents 0.2 of the U.S. GDP
DIAGNOSIS
16Willingness to pay for a binational health
insurance
- 62 of migrants are interested in binational
health insurance - 57 are willing to pay between 75 and 125 U.S.
per month - Private, primary care in the U.S.
- Public in Mexico
- Other studies have estimated the cost of an
integral, binational package in the range of
3,000 to 4,500 U.S. per family per year -
DIAGNOSIS
Vargas-Bustamante A, Ojeda G, Castañeda X.
2008. Tim Waidmann Saad Ahmad. 2007.
17Remittance spending on health services in Mexico,
2002PERCENT
Head of Household
Modified from Amuedo-Dorantes et al 2007, based
on ENIGH 2002.
18Response capacity in the U.S.
- Community Health Centers in the U.S.
- 6,300 points of service in the entire U.S.
territory - Care provided to 17 million people
- This includes 147 health centers for migrants,
with 800,000 patients - They are very interested in binational insurance
- Hometown Associations
- Broad experience in health
- Not always available
- Problematic relationship with Mexico
- Non-profit insurance agencies
- Ventanillas de Salud
DIAGNOSIS
19Response capacity in Mexico
- Secretariat services in high migration areas
- State governments very interested in supporting
migrants - Community agencies with potential for binational
collaboration - Seguro Popular
- Interest and capacity to focus on migrants
- Need to strengthen affiliation
DIAGNOSIS
203. SALUD MIGRANTE PROPOSAL
21Components of SALUD MIGRANTE
- Doctrine
- Policy
- Articulating agency
- Insurance agencies
- Service networks
- Community support
PROPOSAL
22SALUD MIGRANTE Doctrine
- Migrants have a right to health protection in the
U.S. - Temporary residency outside of Mexico should not
limit the constitutional right to health in
Mexico - A constitutional obligation guarantees access to
health services for migrants wherever they
temporarily reside
PROPOSAL
23Functions of the SALUD MIGRANTE Agency
- Dissemination of the Salud Migrante Doctrine in
Mexico and in the U.S. - Building and strengthening capacities Amigos del
Migrante Health Services - Insurance companies and Seguro Popular
- Binational health service networks
- Civil society organizations
- Salud en el Norte Insurance
- Selling policies to migrants
- Insurance Agency Concessions / Franchises
PROPOSAL
24Politics of SALUD MIGRANTE
SALUD EN EL NORTE Primary Care in the U.S.
Seguro Popular Affiliation in the U.S.
- Dissemination of the Salud Migrante Doctrine in
Mexico and in the U.S. - Building and strengthening capacities Amigos del
Migrante Health Services - Insurance companies and Seguro Popular
- Binational health service networks
- Civil society organizations
- Salud en el Norte Insurance
- Selling policies to migrants
- Insurance Agency Concessions / Franchises
25Politics of SALUD MIGRANTE
SALUD EN EL NORTE Primary Care in the U.S.
Seguro Popular Affiliation in the U.S.
26Salud en el Norte Package of Primary Care
274. CONCLUSIONS AND NEXT STEPS
28Conclusions
- Migration demands wide-reaching state policies
and a grand vision - Mexico can initiate a binational health insurance
of great global interest - Significant capacity and interest in
collaboration exists among key players in both
countries
29Next Steps
- Establishment in the binational arena of
- An Advisory Council for Salud Migrante
- A Task Force, coordinated from Mexico
- In-depth analysis and development of platforms in
selected states - Tentative cost 1.1 million
- Proposal of the implementation stages for Salud
Migrante