Title: The Health Care System and Immigrant Health
1The Health Care System and Immigrant Health
Francesca Gany, M.D., M.S.
2The Center for Immigrant Health NYU School of
Medicine
- Network of over 1000 community members,
providers, researchers, policymakers engaging in
creative strategies - Mission To facilitate the delivery of
linguistically, culturally, and epidemiologically
sensitive healthcare services to newcomer
populations. To eliminate ethnic and racial
disparities in health care.
3The Center for Immigrant Health NYU School of
Medicine
- We realize our mission through
- Research
- Outreach And Education
- Information Dissemination
- Program Development
- Advocacy
4PARTNERS
5Why Immigrant Health?
- Health Status Deteriorates with Increasing Length
of Stay - Specific Health Care Barriers
- The Demographics Demand an Immigrant-specific
Focus
6Who is an Immigrant?
- An immigrant is a person who is not born in the
U.S. and who enters the country with the intent
to remain for an indefinite period of time - Naturalized Citizen
- Legal Permanent Resident (Green Card)
- Refugee/Asylee
- PRUCOL
- Undocumented Person (most often overstay the
authorized period of visit)
7U.S. Immigrants
- Over 1 million arrive in the U.S. each year
- Over 28 million Americans were born abroad
- 11 of the U.S. population is foreign-born
- 47 born in Latin America
- 26 born in Asia
- 16 born in Europe
Source U.S. Census Bureau, Population Profile of
the United States 2000 (Internet Release).
8From Where Do Recent Immigrants Come?
-
- In 2001, five nations of the world constituted
40 of countries of origin for legal immigration
to the U.S. - Mexico (206,426)
- India (70,290)
- China (56,426)
- Philippines (53,154)
- Vietnam (35,531)
Source Annual Report Legal Immigration, Fiscal
Year 2001. U.S. Dept. of Justice Immigration and
Naturalization Services.
9New York City Immigrants
- Over 100,000 documented immigrants arrive each
year - NYCs immigrant population grew from 2.1 million
(1990) to 2.9 million (2000) 38 increase - 36 of the NYC population (8 million) is foreign
born
Source U.S. Census Bureau. Population and
Housing Profile New York City, New York. 2002
American Community Survey Profile.
10From Where Do NYC-based Recent Immigrants Come?
-
- Immigrants in NYC represent a slightly different
mix of nationalities - Dominican Republic
- China
- Jamaica
- Guyana
- Mexico
Source Annual Report Legal Immigration, Fiscal
Year 2001. U.S. Dept. of Justice Immigration and
Naturalization Services.
11How Has This Changed?
-
- The has changed from 10 years ago, when the top
countries of origin were - Dominican Republic
- China
- Jamaica
- Italy
- Soviet Union
Source Annual Report Legal Immigration, Fiscal
Year 2001. U.S. Dept. of Justice Immigration and
Naturalization Services.
12The New York City Picture A Look At the Boroughs
-
- Queens more than 1,000,000 (707,153)
- Brooklyn 931,800 (672,569)
- Manhattan 452,400 (383,866)
- Bronx 385,800 (274,793)
- Staten Island 72,700 (44,550)
- ( ) population in 1990
13The Health Care System and Health Disparities
- Data Gaps
- Structure of care
- Financing/legal
- Accommodation of cultural and linguistic
diversity - Racism
14Data Gaps
- Large Datasets Data not collected by meaningful
categories - Lack of disaggregated data, e.g. category Asian
American
15Data Suggested Categories
- Country-of-Origin New in the Census
- Number of Years in the United States
- Dominant Language
- English Ability
- Parents Ethnicity
- Acculturation Index
16Flow of Care/Structure of Care
17Flow of Care/Structure of Care
- Haphazard, Varies by Locality
- Multiple potential sources of care, no roadmap,
no orientation - Out-patient community-based provider, faculty
practices, managed care groups or staff model
facilities, neighborhood family health center,
municipal and voluntary hospital clinic systems,
ER - In-patient voluntary system, for-profit,
municipal - Pharmacy system not centralized and costly
18Health Screening
- Not mandatory for adults except for documented
immigrants, refugee assessments done abroad - No mandatory follow-up once the immigrant arrives
here - Children have requirements for school
19Facilities Often Not Receptive
- Hours of Operation
- Location
- Staff Attitudes
- Multiple Points to Navigate
- The Language Barrier Spoken and Written
- Racism
20Windows of Opportunity
21Financial/Legal
22Immigrant Eligibility for Government Health Care
Benefits
- Medicaid and Child Health Plus (A)
- Family Health Plus
- Child Health Plus (B)
- Prenatal Care Assistance Program (PCAP)
- Emergency Medicaid
- Public Hospitals and Community Based Clinics
- Medicare
- Additional Safety Net Services/Block Grants
23Public Charge Issue and Clarification
- Immigration law term
- People who must depend on public benefits
for income - Can affect immigrants entry, status, adjustment,
and may even lead to deportation. - Justice Department Clarification 1999
- Medicaid (except long-term care) and CHIP not
subject to possible repayment - Utilization will not lead to public charge
determination
24Immigration Concerns and Priorities
- Confidentiality
- Deportation
- Adjustment of Status
- Family Member Sponsorship
25Sponsorship
- Sponsor Deeming
- Deem sponsors resources accessible to the
immigrant applying for Medicaid - Sponsor Liability
- State can require sponsor to repay the
money spent when the immigrant used Medicaid - To date, New York has not put either into
practice.
26Language Access
27United States Census
- 1990 Census
- 31 million spoke a language other than English
- 14 million considered limited English proficient
- 2000 Census
- 47 million speak a language other than English
- 21 million considered limited English proficient
28 LEP Change by State
Source The Access Project National Health Law
Program
29Languages Spoken in NYC
- 24 total NYC population cannot speak English
very well - 12 total NYC population speaks English not
well or not at all - Top 6 languages spoken at home (NYC overall)
- Spanish (1,832,402)
- Chinese (323,517)
- Russian (194,696)
- Italian (139,698)
- French (105,994)
- Haitian Creole (89,085)
30Language Barriers Impact on Health Care
- Less likely to receive care
- Less likely to understand care
- Increased risk of medical errors
- Reduced quality of care
- Increased risk of unethical care
- Less satisfied with care
31Legislative and Compliance Issues
- Title VI of the Office of Civil Rights Act of
1964 - Hill Burton Act
- Health Care Financing and Administration
- Joint Committee on Accreditation and Health Care
Organizations - Executive Order No. 13166 (Improving Access to
Services for Persons with Limited English
Proficiency) - New Statute in California
32Who Usually Interprets?
33Training of Interpreters is Key
34False Fluency
- .or limited Spanish proficient
35Potential Systemic Solution
36Solutions
- Universal Access
- Community-based Partnerships with Government,
Academia, and Provider Systems - Joining Forces to Develop and Disseminate
Creative Solutions
37For More Information
- www.med.nyu.edu/cih
- Ph (212) 263-8783