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California Expanded Medi-Cal to Unauthorized Residents. The Results Are Mixed.
Three vertical photos are shown separated by thin white lines. From left are a man who looks off to his right, a woman who looks at the camera, and another man who looks at the camera.
Daniel Garcia, Vanessa LĆ³pez Zamora, and Douglas Lopez (Arlene Mejorado and Craig Kohlruss for Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņ•īl Health News)

California Expanded Medi-Cal to Unauthorized Residents. The Results Are Mixed.

California this year took the final step in opening Medi-Cal, its Medicaid program, to every eligible resident regardless of immigration status. Itā€™s a significant expansion for an already massive safety net program.

Medi-Calā€™s annual spending now stands at , serving low-income residents, more than a third of Californians. Of those, about 1.5 million are immigrants living in the U.S. without authorization, costing an estimated $6.4 billion, according to the Department of Health Care Services. They have been gradually added to the program as the state lifted legal residency as an eligibility requirement for , in 2020, in 2022, and all in January.

As Californiaā€™s public insurance roll swells, advocates for immigrants praise the Golden State for an expansion that has helped reduce the uninsured rate to a . Providers and hospitals, however, caution that the state hasnā€™t expanded its workforce adequately or increased Medi-Cal payments sufficiently, leaving some enrollees unable to find providers to see them in a timely manner ā€” if at all.

ā€œCoverage does not necessarily mean access,ā€ said Isabel Becerra, CEO and president of the Coalition of Orange County Community Health Centers, during an Oct. 2 in Los Angeles. ā€œThereā€™s a workforce shortage. Weā€™re all fighting for those doctors. Weā€™re fighting with each other for those doctors.ā€

Though the state has raised Medi-Cal payments for primary care, maternity care, and mental health services to 87.5% of what Medicare pays, private insurance still tends to pay more, according to the .

A ballot initiative approved this month guarantees that revenue from a tax on managed-care plans goes toward raising the pay of health care providers who serve Medi-Cal patients.

Some believe the next chapter for covering immigrants will require more than Medi-Cal.

Democratic state Assembly member Joaquin Arambula in 2022 proposed legislation to allow uninsured unauthorized residents who earn more than 138% of the federal poverty level to apply for state-subsidized health coverage through Covered California, the stateā€™s health exchange. The bill, however, died in committee this year.

The final installment of the ā€œFaces of Medi-Calā€ series looks at how Medi-Cal has affected its newest enrollees. They include Vanessa LĆ³pez Zamora, who is finally getting treated for hepatitis and cirrhosis but has trouble seeing a gastroenterologist close to home; Douglas Lopez, an entertainment park worker who credits dental coverage for boosting his well-being; and Daniel Garcia, who suffers from gout but has given up his search for a primary care provider. All spoke to Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņ•īl Health News in Spanish after recently becoming eligible for Medi-Cal.

ā€˜Started Feeling Sick a Long Time Agoā€™

In March, Vanessa LĆ³pez Zamoraā€™s stomach had swollen so much it looked like she was pregnant. She had been vomiting and in pain for days.

She went to her local emergency room, at Kaweah Health Medical Center, but it didnā€™t have a specialist available, she said. So, the 31-year-old was transferred by ambulance to Adventist Health Bakersfield, about 80 miles from her home in Visalia.

A woman dressed in a black shirt and pants stands in a field of sunflowers and looks at the camera.
Doctors diagnosed Vanessa LĆ³pez Zamora with hepatitis A and C and cirrhosis. After four days in the hospital, LĆ³pez Zamora got referred for further treatment to a gastroenterologist, whom she is able to see as a new Medi-Cal enrollee.(Craig Kohlruss for Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņ•īl Health News)

Doctors diagnosed her with hepatitis A and C and cirrhosis, which had caused internal injuries to her liver and esophagus, she said. She spent four days in the hospital and for further treatment got a referral to a gastroenterologist, whom she can see as a new Medi-Cal enrollee ā€” an option she couldnā€™t afford in the past when she had stomach pains and nausea.

“It’s been a very long process because I started feeling sick a long time ago.” said LĆ³pez Zamora, an accountant at a local radio station in Visalia in the San Joaquin Valley. “My girls are very little, and if I can’t get the necessary treatment, I won’t know how much time I have left.”

LĆ³pez Zamora, who came to California from Mexico City when she was 8 years old, is grateful for the care she initially received.

But sheā€™s also frustrated.

The gastroenterologist the hospital referred her to is in Bakersfield ā€” a tough journey for LĆ³pez Zamora, who doesnā€™t drive and canā€™t afford to travel to another city.

Limited access to specialists ā€” from gastroenterologists to cardiologists ā€” has been a long-standing challenge for many Medi-Cal patients, especially those in rural areas or regions facing staff shortages. The San Joaquin Valley, where LĆ³pez Zamora lives, has the in the state, according to the California Health Care Foundation.

Michael Bowman, a spokesperson for Anthem Blue Cross, her Medi-Cal plan, said in an email that Anthem has a broad network of specialists that serve Medi-Cal beneficiaries, including more than 100 gastroenterologists within 20 miles of Visalia.

She is treating her cirrhosis with medication and diet, but in August her gastroenterologist in Bakerfield discovered signs of a precancerous condition in the stomach.

LĆ³pez Zamora said she is searching for a specialist closer to home. For now, she relies on her mother, who must take the day off work, to get to appointments or she takes the bus. She tried using transportation provided by Medi-Cal but was left stranded at the hospital. And she has rescheduled her appointments twice.

ā€œThey drove me up but didnā€™t take me back because they couldnā€™t find an Uber,ā€ she said.

ā€˜A Very Simple Processā€™

Medi-Cal gave Douglas Lopez the dental treatment he couldnā€™t afford.

A man in a black hoodie smiles slightly and looks to his right as the sun shines on his face.
Medi-Cal gave Douglas Lopez dental treatment he couldnā€™t previously afford. In January, Orange County automatically enrolled Lopez in Molina Healthcareā€™s Medi-Cal plan when the state expanded insurance eligibility for unauthorized residents ages 26-49. The coverage has boosted his care, he says.(Arlene Mejorado for Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņ•īl Health News)

The 33-year-old earned minimum wage as a cleaner in an entertainment park in 2022, and the emergency Medi-Cal plan he signed up for covered only emergency extractions.

That year, Lopez experienced a sharp pain in his back teeth when he ate his beloved coconut-and-tamarind candy balls from his native Guatemala.

A dentist told him that he needed several filings and three root canals. He began treatment, but the bills became more expensive: $150 the first session, then $200, then $300.

ā€œI couldnā€™t afford it,ā€ recalled Lopez, who lives in Fullerton. ā€œI had to pay rent and food.ā€

Worried he would lose teeth, he stopped eating anything that would cause him pain.

In January, Orange County automatically enrolled Lopez in Molina Healthcareā€™s Medi-Cal plan when the state expanded insurance eligibility for unauthorized residents ages 26-49. The coverage has transformed his care, he said.

So far, Lopez has seen a dentist six times, for a cleaning, three root canals, two filings, and X-rays. And Medi-Cal has footed the bill.

Lopez’s experience contrasts with that of many other Medi-Cal enrollees, to get the care they need. The UCLA Center for Health Policy Research found that saw Medi-Cal patients of all ages, according to data from 2019 to 2021. Often those dentists limit the number of Medi-Cal patients they will see; only 15% of adult enrollees might get dental care in a given year.

Lopez said Medi-Cal has come through for him.

ā€œIt was a very simple process. I was so excited to search for a dentist,ā€ Lopez said. ā€œThe fear of losing my teeth because I wasnā€™t getting treatment disappeared.ā€

ā€˜Something That You Canā€™t Even Useā€™

Last year, the stabbing pain in Daniel Garciaā€™s arm and foot got so bad that the 39-year-old went to the ER.

Garcia has gout, a type of inflammatory arthritis that can cause intense pain and swelling in his joints. When he became eligible for Medi-Cal coverage this year, he thought he could finally see a doctor for treatment.

But the Los Angeles County resident said he hasnā€™t been able to find a primary care provider willing to take his Molina Healthcare insurance.

ā€œItā€™s frustrating because you have something that you canā€™t even use,ā€ said Garcia, who has been unable to get an annual physical. ā€œIā€™ve called, and they say they donā€™t take my insurance.ā€

A man sits at a table and looks at the camera while a woman stands beside him with her hands on his shoulders.
Daniel Garcia (left) and Yaneth Cardona (right) at their home in Los Angeles. Garcia gained Medi-Cal coverage this year but has not yet found a primary care provider. Cardona qualified for Medi-Cal in 2022. (Arlene Mejorado for Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņ•īl Health News)

Molina declined to comment on Garciaā€™s case and didnā€™t respond to questions about its primary care network.

Nearly people in California live in a total of 611 primary care shortage areas, according to a KFF analysis, which found the state would need to add 881 practitioners to close this gap.

Garcia, a construction worker, said he read that he could manage his arthritis by changing his eating habits. He now eats healthier and has cut back on sugar and Coke. As for the pain, he eases it with ibuprofen. He has given up looking for a provider.

Keeping patients out of the ER, which can be as primary care, is one of the arguments for expanding Medi-Cal. Studies have shown that not only does expanding health coverage lead to lower rates of ER visits, but expanding coverage also leads to patients using preventive care more, said Drishti Pillai, immigrant health policy director at KFF, a health information nonprofit that includes Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņ•īl Health News.

ā€œIt can help save health care costs because conditions are no longer going untreated for a long time, in which case they may become more complex and expensive to treat,ā€ Pillai said.

This article is part of ā€œ,ā€ a series exploring the impact of the stateā€™s safety-net health program on enrollees.

This article was produced by Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņ•īl Health News, which publishes , an editorially independent service of the .Ģż