8:50 am By Maegan La Mala · Health| Immigration| children · 2 Comments
30 Jan 2009
The Senate passed the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP), which helps countless numbers of uninsured children (including my own) access health care. It now moves to the House to be voted on.
One of the more controversial parts of this latest incarnation of the health care bill, is changing the current law that bars legal immigrant children and pregnant women from accessing Medicaid and State Children’s Health Insurance Program for five years after they enter the United States.
What is unclear to me is how legislators can talk up the importance of legal immigration and yet have no problem blocking access to basic health care to those who have legal status? Would they rather have people become sick and access medical care through emergency rooms, costing more money?
Via / The Sanctuary
11:40 am By Maegan La Mala · Drugs| Health| Immigration| Women · Comments Off
17 Sep 2008
Questioning what the U.S. government has deemed healthy and required labels many parents and women as dangerous, careless, negligent and even criminal. But given the history of the U.S. of using women’s bodies, especially the bodies of women of color, as test subjects,as part of racist policy, usually without consent, the latest move by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services should remind us the value placed on our physical health.
In July, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services quietly amended its list of required vaccinations for immigrants applying to become citizens. One of the newest requirements? Gardasil, which vaccinates against the human papillomavirus (HPV). From the agency’s press release:
CDC’s revised Technical Instructions to Civil Surgeons for Vaccination Requirements require the following age-appropriate additional vaccinations to adjust status to legal permanent resident:
* Rotavirus
* Hepatitis A
* Meningococcal
* Human papillomavirus
* Zoster
1:00 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Alabama| Health| Immigration · 1 Comment
12 Oct 2007That’s what an Alabama public health official said. Don Williamson said that a growing immigrant Latino population is bringing with them new cases of TB and chickenpox citing a 2006 statistic that out of the 53 reported cases of tuberculosis en Alabama, half of the infected were from Mexico of Guatemala.
But Williamson wasn’t saying this because he wants a crackdown on immigrants. According to him, he was saying just the opposite, that crackdowns on immigrants would lead to less of them seeking healthcare, creating problems for everyone.
Williamson also blamed immigrants for contributing to a rise in the infant mortality rate because many immigrants do not receive adequate prenatal care.
Via / Univision.com
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