密克罗尼西亚人的保健和宪法权利。

Hawaii medical journal Pub Date : 2011-11-01
Dina Shek, Seiji Yamada
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摘要

根据《自由联合契约》(COFA),来自自由联合国——帕劳共和国(ROP)、马绍尔群岛共和国(RMI)和密克罗尼西亚联邦(FSM)——的越来越多的人移民到美国。1996年,国会通过了广泛的福利改革(《个人责任与工作机会协调法案》),限制了以前COFA移民可获得的某些联邦福利,包括医疗补助福利。在2010年7月之前,夏威夷州继续将COFA移民纳入其国家资助的医疗补助计划。面对预算限制,州政府将这些人从医疗补助名单中删除。2010年12月,在拒绝平等保护法律(即《美国宪法第十四修正案》)的法律基础上提出挑战,成功地恢复了对中非共和国移民的医疗保健。从卫生工作者的角度来看,尽管可能有各种社会正义的论点支持向人民提供卫生保健,但成功的是对司法系统的呼吁。从律师的角度来看,法律上的胜利可能仅限于法庭的四面墙,没有社区参与和相关的社会正义运动。这组作者共同提出,为了更好地解决密克罗尼西亚人民获得医疗保健的问题,我们必须作为卫生和法律倡导者共同努力,为这两个系统定义一个更强有力的愿景,其中包括和解和社区参与。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Health care for Micronesians and constitutional rights.

Under the Compacts of Free Association (COFA), people from the Freely Associated States--the Republic of Palau (ROP), the Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI), and the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM)--have been migrating to the United States in increasing numbers. In 1996, Congress passed broad welfare reform (Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act) which limited certain federal benefits previously available to COFA migrants, including Medicaid benefits. Prior to July 2010, the State of Hawai'i had continued to include COFA migrants under its state-funded Medicaid program. In the face of budget constraints, the State removed these people from its Medicaid rolls. A challenge on the legal basis of the denial of equal protection of the laws, ie, the Fourteenth Amendment to the US Constitution, was successful in reinstating health care to the COFA migrants in December 2010. From the health worker's perspective, regardless of various social justice arguments that may have been marshaled in favor of delivering health care to the people, it was an appeal to the judicial system that succeeded. From the attorney's perspective, the legal victories are potentially limited to the four walls of the courtroom without community involvement and related social justice movements. Together, the authors propose that in order to better address the issue of health care access for Micronesian peoples, we must work together, as health and legal advocates, to define a more robust vision of both systems that includes reconciliation and community engagement.

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