Around one in seven immigrant adults or their family members did not participate in a government benefit program in 2018 for fear of risking future green card status, including one in five low-income families, according to a recent Urban Institute survey. A proposed rule issued by the Department of Homeland Security last year would limit the ability of legal immigrants to adjust or extend their immigration status or gain full citizenship based on their receipt of Medicaid, the Medicare Part D low-income subsidy, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (food stamps) and select housing programs. The AHA has urged the agency to withdraw the rule.
 

Related News Articles

Headline
Women with health-related social needs such as food insecurity, housing instability and lack of transportation were less likely to report receiving a mammogram…
#HealthCareInnovation Blog
Community health workers have become an essential component of RUSH University Medical Center’s efforts to minimize inequities in health and life expectancy.…
Headline
President and CEO John Chessare, M.D., shares how GBMC HealthCare began investing in its Baltimore community by specifically focusing on social determinants of…
Headline
Technology was the topic for the May 17 plenary session discussion between Ivor Horn, M.D., director of health equity and social determinants of health at…
Headline
State, local, territorial and tribal jurisdictions may apply through June 30 for grants of up to $500,000 each for three years to implement interventions…
Headline
ProMedica’s approach to integrating social determinants of health “is designed to offer a helping hand, not a prescribed intervention,” writes the health…