From Health Affairs Today <[email protected]>
Subject How Immigration Status Affects Children’s Health On Both Sides Of The Border
Date July 13, 2021 8:01 PM
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The Latest Research, Commentary, And News From Health Affairs

Tuesday, July 13, 2021

Dear John,

Today we consider the implications of immigration policy and citizenship
restrictions for children's health on both sides of the US-Mexico
border.

Children's Health And Immigration

Four papers in the July 2021 thematic issue discuss the effects of
immigration status and policy on children's well-being and access to
care.

* Sharon Borja and coauthors investigated insurance coverage among US
citizen migrant children

living in Mexico.

* Brandy Lipton and coauthors explored the influence of children's
health insurance expansion

to qualifying households, regardless of immigration status, in
California.

* Mariellen Jewers and Leighton Ku examined eligibility restrictions
and access to public insurance coverage

for noncitizen children.

* Dolores Acevedo-Garcia and coauthors considered immigrant legality
as a social determinant

of family and children's health.

Today on A Health Podyssey, Editor-in-Chief Alan Weil interviews Arturo
Vargas Bustamante on the health of immigrants in the US
today
and how the shifting demography of the nation affects health policies.

Today on Health Affairs Blog, Vineeta Gupta and Sreenath Namboodiri
discuss US support for a waiver

of the Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights Agreement
to create more efficient and equitable opportunities to manufacture and
distribute COVID-19 vaccines.

In a new GrantWatch post by Brian Quinn and Tina Kauh, the Robert Wood
Johnson Foundation calls on academic institutions and other funders

to ensure that policy makers can access research that has gone through a
rigorous equity lens.

Advertise with Health Affairs. In July, we're offering two weeks of
free podcast advertising with any contract closed this month. Learn more
about advertising opportunities.

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The July 2021 thematic issue of

**Health Affairs**takes an intensive look at the

****policy issues related to immigrants, borders, and health. Articles
describe current migration trends and supply new data analysis and
commentary on how policies can address disparities and ease the
disproportionate health burden borne by immigrants.

Immigrant Health: Evidence & Policy Issues
Tuesday, July 20, 2021, 1:30-3 pm (EDT)

Please join us on Tuesday, July 20, when

**Health Affairs** takes a closer look at the effects of recent US
immigration policy on care, coverage, and outcomes for immigrants in the
United States. Topics will include how, in mixed status families,
noncitizen children face tougher health effects than their citizen
siblings; how immigration enforcement reduces use of benefits like
Medicaid and SNAP; and how states and others are crafting policy to
restore that critical safety net.

Register Here

Your Daily Digest

Health Insurance Access Among US Citizen Children In Mexico: National
And Transborder Policy Implications

Sharon Borja et al.

California's Health4All Kids Expansion And Health Insurance Coverage
Among Low-Income Noncitizen Children

Brandy J. Lipton et al.

Noncitizen Children Face Higher Health Harms Compared With Their
Siblings Who Have US Citizen Status

Mariellen Jewers and Leighton Ku

Restoring An Inclusionary Safety Net For Children In Immigrant Families:
A Review Of Three Social Policies

Dolores Acevedo-Garcia et al.

Podcast: An Aging Immigrant Population And The Health Policy Questions
It Raises

Alan Weil and Arturo Vargas Bustamante

America And The TRIPS Waiver: You Can Talk The Talk, But Will You Walk
The Walk?

Vineeta Gupta and Sreenath Namboodiri

For Its Health Equity Agenda, The Biden Administration Needs Research
That Focuses On Impacted Communities

Brian C. Quinn and Tina Kauh

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An Aging Immigrant Population And The Health Policy Questions It Raises

Listen to Health Affairs Editor-in-Chief Alan Weil interview Arturo
Vargas Bustamante from UCLA on the health of immigrants in the US today
and how the shifting demography of the nation affects health policies.

Listen Here

 

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Affairs Today , and Health
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