Health insurance coverage of immigrants living in the United States: differences by citizenship status and country of origin
O Carrasquillo, AI Carrasquillo and S Shea
Division of General Medicine, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, NY 10032, USA. carraso@medicine1.cpmc.columbia.edu
OBJECTIVES: This study examined health insurance coverage among immigrants
who are not US citizens and among individuals from the 16 countries with
the largest number of immigrants living in the United States. METHODS: We
analyzed data from the 1998 Current Population Survey, using logistic
regression to standardize rates of employer-sponsored coverage by country
of origin. RESULTS: In 1997, 16.7 million immigrants were not US citizens.
Among non-citizens, 43% of children and 12% of elders lacked health
insurance, compared with 14% of non-immigrant children and 1% of
non-immigrant elders. Approximately 50% of non-citizen full-time workers
had employer-sponsored coverage, compared with 81% of non-immigrant
full-time workers. Immigrants from Guatemala, Mexico, El Salvador, Haiti,
Korea, and Vietnam were the most likely to be uninsured. Among immigrants
who worked full-time, sociodemographic and employment characteristics
accounted for most of the variation in employer health insurance. For
Central American immigrants, legal status may play a role in high
un-insurance rates. CONCLUSIONS: Immigrants who are not US citizens are
much less likely to receive employer-sponsored health insurance or
government coverage; 44% are uninsured. Ongoing debates on health insurance
reform and efforts to improve coverage will need to focus attention on this
group.
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