California this year took the final step in opening Medi-Cal, its Medicaid program, to every eligible resident regardless of immigration status. It’s a significant expansion for an already massive safety net program.
Medi-Cal’s annual spending now stands at $157 billion, serving about 15 million low-income residents, more than a third of Californians. Of those, about 1.5 million are immigrants living in the U.S. without authorization, costing an estimated $6.4 billion, according to the Department of Health Care Services. They have been gradually added to the program as the state lifted legal residency as an eligibility requirement for children in 2016, young adults ages 19-25 in 2020, people 50 and older in 2022, and all remaining adults in January.
As California’s public insurance roll swells, advocates for immigrants praise the Golden State for an expansion that has helped reduce the uninsured rate to a record low 6.4%. Providers and hospitals, however, caution that the state hasn’t expanded its workforce adequately or increased Medi-Cal payments sufficiently, leaving some enrollees unable to find providers to see them in a timely manner — if at all.
“Coverage does not necessarily mean access,” said Isabel Becerra, CEO and president of the Coalition of Orange County Community Health Centers, during an Oct. 2 health policy summit in Los Angeles. “There’s a workforce shortage. We’re all fighting for those doctors. We’re fighting with each other for those doctors.”
Though the state has raised Medi-Cal payments for primary care, maternity care, and mental health services to 87.5% of what Medicare pays, private insurance still tends to pay more, according to the California Legislative Analyst’s Office.
A ballot initiative this month could guarantee revenue from a tax on managed-care plans goes toward raising the pay of health care providers who serve Medi-Cal patients.
Some believe the next chapter for covering immigrants will require more than Medi-Cal.
Democratic state Assembly member Joaquin Arambula in 2022 proposed legislation to allow the approximately 520,000 uninsured unauthorized residents who earn more than 138% of the federal poverty level to apply for state-subsidized health coverage throug …