Panel Discusses Immigration and Health Care
The Center for Immigration Studies hosted a panel discussion at the Washington Press Club yesterday that discussed the impact of immigration costs on health care. With the health care debate raging on across the country, CIS released some key statistics relating immigration to the cost of health care and the number of uninsured.
Watch the video at C-SPAN's website.
In a backgrounder released by the Center for Immigration Studies, Director of Research Steven Camarota found...
- In 2007, 33.2 percent of all immigrants (legal and illegal) did not have health insurance compared to 12.7 percent of native-born Americans.
- Immigrants account for 27.1 percent of all those without health insurance. Immigrants are 12.5 percent of the nation’s total population.
- There are 14.5 million immigrants and their U.S.-born children (under 18) who lack health insurance. They account for 31.9 percent of the entire uninsured population. Immigrants and their children are 16.8 percent of the nation’s total population.
- In 2007, 47.6 percent of immigrants and their U.S.-born children were either uninsured or on Medicaid compared to 25 percent of natives and their children.
- Lack of health insurance is a significant problem even for long-time residents. Among immigrants who arrived in the 1980s, 28.7 percent lacked health insurance in 2007.
- The high level of uninsurance among immigrants is partly explained by the large share who have low levels of education. This means they often have jobs that do not provide insurance. Moreover, their lower incomes often make insurance unaffordable.
- Cultural factors may also contribute to the high rate of immigrant uninsurance. College-educated immigrants are twice as likely as college-educated natives to lack health insurance.
- In an earlier study, the Center for Immigration Studies estimated that 64 percent of illegal immigrants were uninsured in 2006, accounting for one out of seven people without insurance. If the U.S.-born children (under 18) of illegal immigrants are included, they account for one out of six people without insurance.
- Among legal immigrants (non-citizens), 27 percent were uninsured in 2006.
You can read Dr. Camarota's full report at CIS.org.