Don't Enshrine Discrimination in Health Care Reform
Wednesday 08 July 2009
by: Deepak Bhargava | The Huffington Post

Marguertia, a Mexican undocumented immigrant, waits to receive dialysis at St.
Joseph Hospital Renal Center in Orange County. (Photo: Mark Boster / Los Angeles
Times)
Finally, the country seems serious about reforming health care. But with discussions about a public option, cost control and competition raging, one aspect of achieving true universal coverage is being left out: what to do about immigrants who lack coverage?
All of the plans getting serious consideration in Congress would exclude undocumented immigrants. Many proposals would even bar access to community health centers and emergency rooms -- a historic shift from America's humanitarian tradition that in an emergency no one should be turned away. Some proposals would exclude legal resident immigrants who have been in the United States for less than five years. Unless the debate takes a different turn, millions of immigrants will be left out of the system.
We should not enshrine discriminatory principles into a new health care system. A "universal" health care program that leaves out millions of Americans is a fraud. Just as we stand up for other core principles in the health care debate -- quality, affordability, a strong public plan -- we need to stand up for immigrant coverage as an essential component of just and effective health care reform.
Without immigrant inclusion, people like Ockwhan Her, a 48 year-old Korean-American mother of two from Los Angeles, will continue being relegated to second class status. Ockwhan, uninsured, couldn't afford to visit the doctor when the pains in her stomach became too great to ignore. It wasn't until a personal emergency forced her to return to Korea that she was able to afford seeing a doctor, and learn that the pain in her stomach was cancer. Even though a legal permanent resident in the United States, our laws bar her from receiving health care benefits that could save her life.
It's worth reminding ourselves of why it's so important for immigrants to be included in our national health care system. Here are some common sense reasons:
Contrary to right-wing myth, almost all immigrants pay taxes. Excluding immigrants from a tax-funded health care system is simply unfair. If immigrants are excluded from coverage, they will continue to go to emergency rooms for medical services, services that we ultimately pay for through public programs or higher insurance premiums. Rather than subsidize inadequate, short-term care, let's provide real preventative care that will actually keep families healthy. Health is, by nature, a public good. We all benefit when every family in our community is healthy. Leaving out millions of Americans hurts all of us, not just those who are excluded.
There is no reasonable basis for excluding immigrants from access to health care. It's all about bigotry and fear, including the fears of our political leadership. Even many progressive members of Congress are reluctant to take a stand because they don't want to get in the way of health care "reform."
But until we include everyone, universal coverage will continue to be a myth, and tax payers like Ockwhan will continue to suffer needlessly.



Comments
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I reject the author's
Fri, 07/10/2009 - 17:01 β CounselorTroi (not verified)Apart from agreement with
Fri, 07/10/2009 - 17:49 β Anonymous (not verified)YOu forget that while they
Fri, 07/10/2009 - 18:15 β Wakethe100thMonkey (not verified)How many services you receive and products you buy are done or produced by immigrants or other people living and working here for next to nothing? And what of the stuff THEY buy? Groceries, clothes, services? If you took that away from the city in which you live what would the economic impact of that be?
Poor people of all kinds crowd emergency rooms for one reason only: they cannot get ANY health services except for that. If there were basic public health services for anybody and everybody, conditions could be handled when they're relatively small matters and relieve the emergency room crush.
When Americans go to other
Fri, 07/10/2009 - 18:16 β Anonymous (not verified)It cannot be shown whether a
Fri, 07/10/2009 - 18:28 β Anonymous (not verified)A growing number of
Fri, 07/10/2009 - 22:19 β Jenna (not verified)I agree with Fri, 07/10/2009
Sat, 07/11/2009 - 01:34 β Howard Christofersen, M. D. (not verified)The problem is not the
Sat, 07/11/2009 - 15:03 β Anonymous (not verified)In most of the industialized
Sat, 07/11/2009 - 20:47 β radline9 (not verified)