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California Lawmakers Preserve Aid to Older, Disabled Immigrants

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Vanessa G. Sánchez
Fri, 14 Jun 2024 09:00:00 +0000

California lawmakers on Thursday passed a 2024-25 budget that rejected Gov. Gavin Newsom’s proposal to cut in-home supportive services for low-income older, blind, and disabled immigrants lacking legal residency. However, the Democratic governor has not said whether he’ll use his line-item veto authority to close the state’s $45 billion deficit.

The , controlled by Democrats, passed a $211 billion general fund spending plan for the fiscal year starting July 1 by drawing more from the state’s rainy-day fund and reducing corporate tax deductions to prevent cuts to health and social services.

“Our legislative budget plan achieves those goals with targeted, carefully calibrated investments in safety-net programs that protect our most vulnerable,” said Assembly member Jesse Gabriel, chair of the Assembly’s budget committee, voting in Sacramento.

Newsom and lawmakers are expected to continue talks.

“What was approved represents a two-house agreement between the Senate and the Assembly – not an agreement with the governor,” said Department of Finance spokesperson H.D. Palmer. “We’ve made good progress, but there’s still more work to do.”

Newsom had proposed eliminating the new in-home benefit for qualified immigrants to save nearly $95 million in the next fiscal year, with no plans to bring it back. Lawmakers not only rejected Newsom’s cut to the in-home services program; they also refused the governor’s proposal to slash $300 million a year from public health agencies. However, they accepted delaying food assistance to low-income older immigrants without legal residency.

The In-Home Supportive Services program helps low-income older, blind, and disabled individuals care in their homes, which helps keep them out of more costly nursing and residential facilities. The program works by paying $16 to $21 an hour to caregivers, many of them members.

Advocates applauded lawmakers for rejecting the cut. They had urged the governor to adopt the legislature’s budget, arguing the state could end up paying more in the long as Medi-Cal recipients tap nursing services. The state has estimated the annual per-person cost of nursing homes is $124,189, compared with the roughly $28,000 average cost for people without legal residency in the in-home services program.

“These individuals would need to essentially go into costly hospital or nursing care,” said Ronald Coleman Baeza, managing policy director at the California Pan-Ethnic Health Network. “It’s not only cruel for undocumented immigrants, but it doesn’t make sense as a fiscal either.”

The governor has said he’s trying to maintain fiscal discipline while preserving Medi-Cal for immigrants. California was the first state to expand Medicaid eligibility to all qualified immigrants regardless of legal status, phasing it in over several years: children in 2016, adults ages 19-26 in 2020, people 50 and older in 2022, and all remaining adults this year.

“It’s a core of I think who we are as a state, and we should be as a nation,” Newsom said in May.

As part of the Medi-Cal expansion, the state authorized nearly 3,000 older, blind, and disabled immigrants without legal residency to access paramedical services and daily care, including meal preparation, bathing, feeding, and transportation to medical appointments. Advocates estimate 17,000 immigrants qualify.

“Fixing California’s deficit means making tough choices, so the Assembly came to these negotiations focused on preserving programs that matter most to Californians,” said Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas, a Central Coast Democrat, in an earlier statement.

Lawmakers did agree to Newsom’s proposal to delay around $165 a month in food assistance to low-income immigrants without legal residency ages 55 and older. Lawmakers had approved the benefit two years ago, but the governor proposed delaying it by two fiscal years to 2027.

This article was produced by KFF Health News, which publishes California Healthline, an editorially independent service of the California Health Care Foundation. 

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By: Vanessa G. Sánchez
Title: California Lawmakers Preserve Aid to Older, Disabled Immigrants
Sourced From: kffhealthnews.org/news/article/california-lawmakers-aid-immigrants-in-home-services-budget-newsom/
Published Date: Fri, 14 Jun 2024 09:00:00 +0000

Kaiser Health News

Potential Listeria Contamination in Frozen Waffles

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www.youtube.com – KFF – 2024-10-22 12:49:00

SUMMARY: Over 600 frozen waffle products from various brands are being recalled due to potential listeria contamination, detected through routine testing at a manufacturing facility. Fortunately, there have been no confirmed cases of illness or associated with these products. They are sold at major retailers like Target and , which have responded by removing the affected items from stores and placing sales restrictions on them. The increase in listeria recalls is attributed to a more complex food supply chain, higher consumer demand for ready-to-eat processed foods, and advances in testing that allow for better detection of foodborne pathogens.

More than 600 frozen waffle products are being voluntarily recalled due to a potential listeria contamination.

KFF Health News’ Celiné Gounder joined CBS Mornings to discuss what to do if you have one of the affected products.
#waffles #listeria

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Kaiser Health News

Mothering Over Meds: Docs Say Common Treatment for Opioid-Exposed Babies Isn’t Necessary

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kffhealthnews.org – Taylor Sisk – 2024-10-22 04:00:00

SUMMARY: Cailyn Morreale feared her pregnancy while on buprenorphine for opioid addiction, worrying about separating from her newborn due to withdrawal symptoms. Traditionally, many used medication-heavy regimens, resulting in separation from mothers and NICU stays. However, the new “Eat, Sleep, Console” approach allows babies to stay with their mothers, showing that comfort and familial connection often to quicker recoveries. Studies reveal this method reduces hospital stays and promotes better outcomes. Practitioners emphasize a shift toward -centered care, empowering mothers and reducing stigma, ultimately ensuring healthier bonding experiences for families affected by addiction.

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Beneficiarios de Medicare gastarán menos en medicamentos en 2025

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kffhealthnews.org – Susan Jaffe – 2024-10-21 07:40:00

SUMMARY: Pam McClure, una beneficiaria de Medicare de 70 años, anticipa ahorrar casi $4,000 en medicamentos gracias a la Ley de Reducción de la Inflación (IRA) de 2022, que limita los gastos de bolsillo a $2,000 en 2025. La ley también reduce copagos de insulina y permite que Medicare negocie precios. Sin embargo, algunos planes incrementarán sus primas significativamente. El período de inscripción anual comenzó el 15 de octubre y finalizará el 7 de diciembre; los beneficiarios deben comparar planes para evitar sorpresas y costos más altos. La IRA introduce cambios significativos en la cobertura de medicamentos de Medicare.

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