Trends In Health Care Spending For Immigrants In The United States

Immigration & Health Care Reform

Trends In Health Care Spending For Immigrants In The United States

Feb 11, 2010

Health Affairs | Jim P. StimpsonFernando A. Wilson and Karl Eschbach

Trends In Health Care Spending For Immigrants In The United States

The suspected burden that undocumented immigrants may place on the U.S. health care system has been a flashpoint in healthcare and immigration reform debates. An examination of health care spending during 1999–2006 for adult naturalized citizens and immigrant noncitizens (which includes some undocumented immigrants) finds that the cost of providing health care to immigrants is lower than that of providing care to U.S. natives and that immigrants are not contributing disproportionately to high health care costs in public programs such as Medicaid. However, noncitizen immigrants were found to be more likely than U.S. natives to have a health care visit classified as uncompensated care.

 

 
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