• About
  • Contact Us
The Filipino American Post
Advertisement
ADVERTISEMENT
  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • PH News
    • World News
    Trump tells Marcos tariff on PH exports to US set at 20%

    Trump tells Marcos tariff on PH exports to US set at 20%

    Sara defends fictitious names in intelligence fund expenses

    Sara defends fictitious names in intelligence fund expenses

    Senators push for house arrest, repatriation for ex-pres. Duterte

    Senators push for house arrest, repatriation for ex-pres. Duterte

    Possible remains of missing sabungeros found in Taal lake

    Possible remains of missing sabungeros found in Taal lake

    House pushes for impeachment trial; Senate hints of dismissal

    House pushes for impeachment trial; Senate hints of dismissal

  • Community
  • EVENTS
  • Opinion
    • All
    • Column
    • Legal
    NaFFAA Honors Pope Francis a.k.a. Lolo Kiko

    NaFFAA Honors Pope Francis a.k.a. Lolo Kiko

    In this column, we will aim to raise awareness about osteoporosis, highlighting the importance of early screening and timely diagnosis, with a special focus on older women in the Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander communities.

    In this column, we will aim to raise awareness about osteoporosis, highlighting the importance of early screening and timely diagnosis, with a special focus on older women in the Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander communities.

    Berberine for diabetes

    The two important Medicare enrollment period will end on Mach 31, 2025. Additionally, be sure not to miss the application open period for home energy assistance.

    The two important Medicare enrollment period will end on Mach 31, 2025. Additionally, be sure not to miss the application open period for home energy assistance.

    Pinapalakas ng California ang Bayad na Mga Benepisyo sa Pag-iwan ng Pamilya at Kapansanan upang Magtala ng Mga Antas para sa Mga Bagong Claim na Naihain noong 2025

    Pinapalakas ng California ang Bayad na Mga Benepisyo sa Pag-iwan ng Pamilya at Kapansanan upang Magtala ng Mga Antas para sa Mga Bagong Claim na Naihain noong 2025

    In recent years, rising inflation has made it harder for many seniors to pay their expenses. This month, we’ll look at programs that can help with the cost of groceries and health care. If your income and resources are limited, you may qualify for assistance from federal and/or state programs.

    In recent years, rising inflation has made it harder for many seniors to pay their expenses. This month, we’ll look at programs that can help with the cost of groceries and health care. If your income and resources are limited, you may qualify for assistance from federal and/or state programs.

    Vital medical tips

    Ginagalang ng California ang Kapangyarihan ng Iyong Boto

    Ginagalang ng California ang Kapangyarihan ng Iyong Boto

    De-stressing

  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Arts & Culture
    • Business
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
    ALYN Is All In On Women’s Golf

    ALYN Is All In On Women’s Golf

    5 Easy Ways to Cut Waste at Your Summer Parties

    5 Easy Ways to Cut Waste at Your Summer Parties

    Bold Bites, Big Flames, and Bigger Smiles: New Benihana Heats Up San Mateo’s Dining Scene

    Bold Bites, Big Flames, and Bigger Smiles: New Benihana Heats Up San Mateo’s Dining Scene

    Medicinal Mulberries

    Medicinal Mulberries

    When In Baguio

    When In Baguio

  • Online Newspaper
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • PH News
    • World News
    Trump tells Marcos tariff on PH exports to US set at 20%

    Trump tells Marcos tariff on PH exports to US set at 20%

    Sara defends fictitious names in intelligence fund expenses

    Sara defends fictitious names in intelligence fund expenses

    Senators push for house arrest, repatriation for ex-pres. Duterte

    Senators push for house arrest, repatriation for ex-pres. Duterte

    Possible remains of missing sabungeros found in Taal lake

    Possible remains of missing sabungeros found in Taal lake

    House pushes for impeachment trial; Senate hints of dismissal

    House pushes for impeachment trial; Senate hints of dismissal

  • Community
  • EVENTS
  • Opinion
    • All
    • Column
    • Legal
    NaFFAA Honors Pope Francis a.k.a. Lolo Kiko

    NaFFAA Honors Pope Francis a.k.a. Lolo Kiko

    In this column, we will aim to raise awareness about osteoporosis, highlighting the importance of early screening and timely diagnosis, with a special focus on older women in the Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander communities.

    In this column, we will aim to raise awareness about osteoporosis, highlighting the importance of early screening and timely diagnosis, with a special focus on older women in the Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander communities.

    Berberine for diabetes

    The two important Medicare enrollment period will end on Mach 31, 2025. Additionally, be sure not to miss the application open period for home energy assistance.

    The two important Medicare enrollment period will end on Mach 31, 2025. Additionally, be sure not to miss the application open period for home energy assistance.

    Pinapalakas ng California ang Bayad na Mga Benepisyo sa Pag-iwan ng Pamilya at Kapansanan upang Magtala ng Mga Antas para sa Mga Bagong Claim na Naihain noong 2025

    Pinapalakas ng California ang Bayad na Mga Benepisyo sa Pag-iwan ng Pamilya at Kapansanan upang Magtala ng Mga Antas para sa Mga Bagong Claim na Naihain noong 2025

    In recent years, rising inflation has made it harder for many seniors to pay their expenses. This month, we’ll look at programs that can help with the cost of groceries and health care. If your income and resources are limited, you may qualify for assistance from federal and/or state programs.

    In recent years, rising inflation has made it harder for many seniors to pay their expenses. This month, we’ll look at programs that can help with the cost of groceries and health care. If your income and resources are limited, you may qualify for assistance from federal and/or state programs.

    Vital medical tips

    Ginagalang ng California ang Kapangyarihan ng Iyong Boto

    Ginagalang ng California ang Kapangyarihan ng Iyong Boto

    De-stressing

  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Arts & Culture
    • Business
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
    ALYN Is All In On Women’s Golf

    ALYN Is All In On Women’s Golf

    5 Easy Ways to Cut Waste at Your Summer Parties

    5 Easy Ways to Cut Waste at Your Summer Parties

    Bold Bites, Big Flames, and Bigger Smiles: New Benihana Heats Up San Mateo’s Dining Scene

    Bold Bites, Big Flames, and Bigger Smiles: New Benihana Heats Up San Mateo’s Dining Scene

    Medicinal Mulberries

    Medicinal Mulberries

    When In Baguio

    When In Baguio

  • Online Newspaper
No Result
View All Result
The Filipino American Post
No Result
View All Result
Home Community

Medi-Cal cuts threaten undocumented immigrants’ health

by Roxsy Lin
June 20, 2025
in Community
0
Thousands take to the streets of Los Angeles to protest Trump’s policies

For Daniela and her husband, Jose, undocumented immigrants living in the US over 30 years, Medi-Cal is a lifeline. (Art: Roxsy Lin)

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Amid statewide immigration crackdowns, undocumented immigrants now face another threat: losing their health care

Amid statewide immigration crackdowns, undocumented immigrants now face another threat: losing their health care.

Governor Gavin Newsom announced a proposal in mid-May that would significantly change Medi-Cal access for undocumented immigrants aged 19 and older, starting in 2026. The plan includes a freeze on new enrollments, the introduction of a $100 monthly premium and the elimination of dental and long-term care coverage. 

The measure, which is expected to save the government over $5 billion, must be included in the state budget and approved by the California Legislature before it can take effect.     

For Daniela and her husband, Jose (we are not using their real names to protect their privacy) — both undocumented immigrants living in the US over 30 years and currently residing in San Bernardino with their two children — Medi-Cal is a lifeline.

In 2018, Jose received a diagnosis of sleep apnea so severe that his oxygen levels dropped dangerously low, landing him in the hospital for two weeks. For a year after his discharge, he had to use an in-home oxygen concentrator at all times.

During that time, Medi-Cal made it possible for the couple to access specialists, medications, essential equipment maintenance and a weekly home visit from a nurse for checkups on Jose’s recovery — care that would have been out of reach otherwise.

That support didn’t end with Jose’s recovery. 

Today, he depends on a CPAP machine to breathe properly while sleeping at night, and during daytime naps. The machine, vital to his health, requires regular maintenance including monthly filter changes and replacement of hoses and masks. 

Medi-Cal continues to cover these ongoing expenses — in addition to regular doctor check-ups and medications to manage his high blood pressure, diabetes and cholesterol — easing an otherwise insurmountable financial burden for the family.

If the upkeep of Jose’s CPAP machine were unaffordable and the device were to stop working due to a lack of maintenance, for instance, it could compromise his breathing, putting his life in danger and undoing years of progress in his recovery.

“God keeps me alive with this machine right now,” said José in Spanish. “We have to live with what God lends us, but if he lends us things and they want to take them away, what are we going to do?”

When asked about the possibility of having to pay a $100 monthly premium each, the couple didn’t hesitate to share their concern. 

“We couldn’t afford it. We either eat or we pay, because it’s too much to pay $200 a month,” said Daniela. 

Jose added that just keeping up with rent and utilities is already a struggle, and if required to pay the premium, they “would have to go without Medi-Cal.”

“For many, a hundred dollars might not seem like much,” said Luz Gallegos, executive director of TODEC, in Spanish. 

She explained that for families living paycheck to paycheck, every penny counts — that $100 can provide a week’s worth of groceries, a tank of gas or a crucial part of their rent.

For farmworkers and other immigrant laborers performing tough jobs in extreme conditions for the lowest wages, this amount is not just a number; it can mean survival, continued Gallegos. 

“Economic and community well-being must go hand in hand,” she said. “Without healthy men and women, we will not have a healthy economy.”

Mireya Suarez, a community organizer at CHIRLA in San Bernardino, believes that the most effective approach to healthcare involves investing in prevention instead of waiting for conditions to worsen. 

“It will always be much cheaper for the state to prevent chronic diseases instead of providing care when the person already has a chronic disease, which will last for a long time,” she said in Spanish.

A single emergency room visit can cost the government thousands of dollars — far more than a routine check-up or preventive treatment.

Gallegos has observed this dynamic at play, as TODEC has documented cases of patients who have gone to the ER only when their illnesses are already very advanced, or when about to die.

“We have serious cases of people whose diabetes wasn’t detected in time, and they end up blind. Imagine that — men we know who have gone blind at 30, 33, another one at 40-something years old,” she said. 

“These are young men who were working in the fields and started to feel sick, and there was no other option,” Gallegos continued. “They were taken to the emergency room, and by then, their diabetes was already very advanced.”

Another health condition that Jose must manage is hyperuricemia, an excess of uric acid in the blood that causes severe swelling in his feet, knees, hands and fingers, often making it nearly impossible for him to stand or walk.

Before the couple had Medi-Cal, flare-ups would leave him bedridden for weeks. Without any affordable treatment available, they had to rely on friends traveling to Mexico to bring back just enough medication to ease his symptoms for a few days — barely enough to get him back to work and provide for Daniela and their two young children.

Now, with Medi-Cal, as soon as Jose begins to feel the early symptoms of a flare-up, he seeks immediate attention, preventing the swelling from immobilizing him and wreaking long-term damage to his joints. 

With looming statewide cuts, those benefits could be put in jeopardy.

In Gallegos’ opinion, it is not the time to restrict access, but rather to expand it. 

In her day-to-day work on the ground, she witnesses the harsh reality that many immigrant families, especially undocumented workers, are facing more than ever. 

They live in fear, she described, and without the mental health resources they desperately need, depression can take hold. 

With anti-immigrant rhetoric escalating at the federal level, meanwhile, the consequences have been devastating. 

“We’ve recently documented several suicide cases, particularly among men,” said Gallagos. “Imagine living with this situation and not having access to health care.”

For her, this is a critical moment for the state to stand firmly with the community and offer real, sustained support.

ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

Tax returns: Another weapon in Trump assault on Americans’ privacy

Next Post

‘A disaster waiting to happen’ — Trump and the Insurrection Act

Related Posts

A guide to surviving ‘La Migra’
Community

PH Consulate meets with global start-up accelerator to explore innovation partnerships

July 17, 2025
A guide to surviving ‘La Migra’
Community

SF PH Consulate General, DOST explore new avenues for science, innovation, cultural diplomacy

July 17, 2025
A guide to surviving ‘La Migra’
Community

SF PH Consulate General conducts onsite outreach with SSS, PNB

July 17, 2025
Next Post
Thousands take to the streets of Los Angeles to protest Trump’s policies

‘A disaster waiting to happen’ — Trump and the Insurrection Act

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Recent News

Sara defends fictitious names in intelligence fund expenses
News

Sara defends fictitious names in intelligence fund expenses

by Ver Bermudez
July 17, 2025
0

Impeached vice-president Sara Duterte-Carpio has sought to discredit claims of irregularities in her office, explaining publicly that the use of...

Senators push for house arrest, repatriation for ex-pres. Duterte

Senators push for house arrest, repatriation for ex-pres. Duterte

July 17, 2025
Possible remains of missing sabungeros found in Taal lake

Possible remains of missing sabungeros found in Taal lake

July 17, 2025
A guide to surviving ‘La Migra’

PH Consulate meets with global start-up accelerator to explore innovation partnerships

July 17, 2025
A guide to surviving ‘La Migra’

SF PH Consulate General, DOST explore new avenues for science, innovation, cultural diplomacy

July 17, 2025
The Filipino American Post

© 2025
THE FILIPINO AMERICAN POST

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Contact Us

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • NEWS
    • PH News
    • World News
  • COMMUNITY
  • EVENTS
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • SPORTS
  • OPINION
  • LIFESTYLE
    • Business
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
    • Arts & Culture
  • ONLINE NEWSPAPER

© 2025
THE FILIPINO AMERICAN POST