January 19, 2007
Ahnold To Illegals: Come And Get It!
Governor Schwarzenegger's
proposal to provide
health insurance to illegal aliens strikes us as a
bad news, good news situation. The good news: health
spending per illegal may decline. The bad news: there
may be far more illegals—because of the message that the
proposal sends.
Illegals in California already have access to
Emergency Room care, thanks to a
Federal law mandating hospitals to
treat uninsured patients. The expense is born by
California taxpayers (see California Medical
Association, The ER Crisis: Impact of the Uninsured
on Emergency Care, July 2004.
PDF) who pay more
than $5 billion a year to care for the uninsured, or
insured individuals and their employers, many of whom
can hardly pay their existing insurance premiums...
(Of course, some uninsured aliens
notoriously proceed to run up multi-million dollar
bills in
long-term care—which doesn’t show up as an ER
expense.)
The rationale for the Schwarzenegger scheme: Forcing
aliens to delay treatment until they are in crisis is
more expensive than paying for preventive care. Chronic
diseases like high blood pressure,
diabetes, and asthma can be efficiently managed, or
even avoided, by preventive care in a doctor’s office.
In crisis mode, they turn into hospitalizations that
cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. Similarly,
able-bodied aliens clog ERs with routine, easily treated
maladies like earache and the flu.
More than 80 percent of all uninsured patient visits
to ERs could have been treated in a non-ER environment,
according to the California Office of Statewide Health
Planning. Between 1990 and 2000 more than 60 ER’s in
California closed.
Fewer ERs plus more uninsured aliens equals
an ER crisis for everyone—insured and uninsured
alike. Hospital ERs have been forced to wave off
ambulances because they are full. The diversion problem
is measured by the hours a hospital ER is unavailable.
Sacramento hospitals reported more than 6,000 hours of
ambulance diversion in 2003. The situation in
LA County, home to
45 percent of the state’s illegals, is worse:
Ambulances are diverted 25 percent of the time.
OK. So the Governator’s plan could theoretically
reduce healthcare costs and increase accessibility. At
least in the short run.
But the prospect of
universal health insurance may trigger a new wave of
illegals. The most likely suspects: not illegal workers,
many of whom would come even if
health care were not available to them, but pregnant
females and the elderly, who come specifically for
treatment.
Medi-Cal paid for the delivery of about 107,000
illegal alien babies in 2004, about 43 percent of
all deliveries under the state plan. Many of these were
born to mothers who crossed the border for the express
purpose of
giving birth on U.S. soil. These ER deliveries
involve considerable risk to mothers and their babies.
In Ahnold’s brave new world, illegal alien mothers
will have access to the
full gamut of pre-natal care, obstetrical services,
postnatal check ups, and pediatric care. Even
fertility-enhancing drugs could be made available to
them under the Governor’s plan. These services could be
a decisive draw for soon-to-be mothers contemplating a
cross border delivery.
Some illegals are already getting this care at
California’s county clinics. But they have been
relatively slow to use it and other programs—apparently
because of the lingering effects of 1994’s Proposition
187. As George Borjas puts it, “Although most of the
provisions in the proposition were never enforced, its
impact on the political and social climate of California
is undeniable. It represented a seismic shift in the
relation between the host population (i.e., the voters
of California) and a particular segment of the immigrant
population….” (The
Impact of Welfare Reform on Immigrant Welfare Use,
CIS, March 2002).
Borjas argues this chilling effect of Proposition 187
undoubtedly contributed to the drop in immigrant
Medicaid usage. Outside of California, immigrant
recipiency rates continued to rise. The Schwarzenegger
scheme will unchill California’s message. Any reduction
in per recipient spending could easily be overwhelmed by
a rising tide of alien recipients.
A modest proposal: cut off medical demand at the
border. Simply enforce the laws against illegal
immigration, systematically change
the incentives that keep illegal aliens in the
U.S.—and cut off legal immigration with a
moratorium.
Edwin S. Rubenstein (email
him) is President of
ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis.