Health Insurance Access Among US Citizen Children In Mexico: National And Transborder Policy Implications.

Autor: Borja S; Sharon Borja (sborja@central.uh.edu) is an assistant professor in the Graduate College of Social Work, University of Houston, in Houston, Texas., Berger Cardoso J; Jodi Berger Cardoso is an associate professor in the Graduate College of Social Work, University of Houston., De La Cruz PI; Pedro Isnardo De La Cruz is a research coordinator and professor at the Escuela Nacional de Trabajo Social, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, in Mexico City, Mexico., Perreira KM; Krista M. Perreira is a professor in the School of Medicine, University of North Carolina, in Chapel Hill, North Carolina., Giraldo-Santiago N; Natalia Giraldo-Santiago is a PhD candidate in the Graduate College of Social Work, University of Houston., Jasso Oyervides MV; Martha Virginia Jasso Oyervides is a professor at the Facultad de Trabajo Social, Universidad Autónoma de Coahuila, in Saltillo, Coahuila, Mexico.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Health affairs (Project Hope) [Health Aff (Millwood)] 2021 Jul; Vol. 40 (7), pp. 1066-1074.
DOI: 10.1377/hlthaff.2021.00087
Abstrakt: More than 500,000 US citizen migrant children were residing in Mexico in 2015, and more than half of them had limited, inadequate health insurance despite their citizenship status. The majority of these children lived in Mexican states near the US border. Despite these numbers, knowledge regarding these children and their health has been scarce. To address these knowledge gaps, we analyzed data from the 2015 Mexican Intercensal Survey to examine whether the health insurance status of US citizen migrant children in Mexico is linked to individual, household, and state factors. We compared rates of insured US citizen migrant children with rates among those who were underinsured. We found high rates of underinsurance among US citizen migrant children, especially in northern Mexican border states. Parental education, labor-force participation, urban residence, and border residence partially accounted for these children's probability of being insured. Our results have implications for binational policies that extend health care protection to US citizen migrant children through reintegration assistance for their parents, an expedited dual-citizenship application process, and exempting these children from the automatic cancellation of US-based health benefits.
Databáze: MEDLINE