Roberta Perna, political sociologist
The Italian healthcare system is quite inclusive towards undocumented migrants. Yet, exclusionary discourses have emerged over time, grounded on the costs of such inclusiveness. Data – although scarce – provide a different picture.
Introduction
One of the EU countries with the largest estimates about the presence of undocumented migrants (UMs) and with a universalistic health system (Sistema Sanitario Nazionale – SSN), Italy guarantees extensive healthcare to UMs. However, and despite what data says, welfare chauvinist discourses have fuelled in the country, depicting UMs as a burden for the SSN.
Policy rules
In its Preamble, the 1998 Immigration Law affirms the duty of guaranteeing fundamental human rights to foreigners, regardless of their legal status.[1]Healthcare is the sole right explicitly defined as fundamental in the Italian Constitution. Then, its Health Section stipulates that UMs shall have access to “urgent and essential care” on a continuous basis, including pregnancy and maternity care, childcare, and public health measures.[2]Urgent care refers to services that cannot be deferred without putting the person’s life and health at risk. Essential care includes diagnostic and therapeutic services related to non-dangerous pathologies in the short term, but that could cause greater damage to the person’s health over time (eg, complications, chronic … Lire la suite In procedural terms, healthcare access is provided via an anonymous code, which is valid for 6 months and can be renewed. Importantly, health workers cannot report UMs to the police.
For what concerns provision, each region shall identify the most appropriate ways to guarantee healthcare access to UMs in its territory, reflecting the decentralised nature of the SSN. Consequently, great heterogeneity exists across the national territory.[3]For instance, some regions provide primary care to UMs via dedicated public clinics, others through mainstream general practitioners, while still others through accredited non-governmental organisations. Differences also exist in terms of provisions that regions may decide to further put in place : eg, 12 regions over 20 extended … Lire la suite
« As research demonstrates, restricting healthcare access for UMs is inefficient and irrational, even when endorsing pure economic or public health views only. Unfortunately, politics often blind individuals. »
Roberta Perna, political sociologist
Finally, in terms of financing, treatments provided to UMs shall be reimbursed to regions by the central government, while the organisation of healthcare (including, eg, mediation services, medical staff and material resources for primary care) lies on each region’s budget. Migrants should participate in the costs of treatments received but, as in the case of Italian citizens, they may be exempted from co-payments for health reasons (eg, chronic disease, severe pathology) or economic reasons (economic indigence).
A welfare burden ? Exclusionary claims vs. (few) data
Healthcare access for UMs has often been framed as a “welfare burden” by Italian right-wing, anti-immigration parties, such us the League and Fratelli d’Italia. Particularly at times of economic crises, they have frequently mobilised the (alleged) high cost of providing healthcare to undeserving “clandestini” and “fraudulent medical tourists” against the shortages suffered by the “Italian poor”, calling for their exclusion from free-of-charge healthcare.
These discourses – charging with racial shades the imperatives of “rationalisation in healthcare” and of stopping “abuses of the system” that have been present in Italy since the mid-2000s – are contradicted by existing data, although limited. For the period 1998–2017, approximately 0.2 % of the annual National Health Fund was allocated by the Health Ministry to regions to this end.[4] Except for emergency care, which was reimbursed by the Home Ministry (no data available). Since 2018, the dedicated line of budget has been merged with other expenditure items, making it impossible to retrieve the annual amount of reimbursement. For what concerns the costs of treatments, in 2010 UMs accounted for 0.4 % of all hospitalisations in the country and for 0.34 % of public expenditure for hospitalisation.[5]Agenas, 2013. La valutazione economica dell’assistenza sanitaria erogata agli immigrati : metodologia e primi risultati. Available on line [in Italian only]: … Lire la suite
Yet, exclusionary arguments persist, including during the COVID-19 pandemic. Next to portraying migrants landing to Italy as vectors of the virus, the League and Fratelli d’Italia harshly criticised the regularisation of UMs approved in May 2020 for public health (and economic) reasons, calling the government to dedicate its limited resources to protect the Italians instead.
As research demonstrates[lien vers Vignier], restricting healthcare access for UMs is inefficient and irrational, even when endorsing pure economic or public health views only. Unfortunately, politics often blind individuals.
Notes[+]
↑1 | Healthcare is the sole right explicitly defined as fundamental in the Italian Constitution. |
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↑2 | Urgent care refers to services that cannot be deferred without putting the person’s life and health at risk. Essential care includes diagnostic and therapeutic services related to non-dangerous pathologies in the short term, but that could cause greater damage to the person’s health over time (eg, complications, chronic conditions). Continuity of care implies providing patients with a complete therapeutic and rehabilitation cycle. |
↑3 | For instance, some regions provide primary care to UMs via dedicated public clinics, others through mainstream general practitioners, while still others through accredited non-governmental organisations. Differences also exist in terms of provisions that regions may decide to further put in place : eg, 12 regions over 20 extended co-payment exemptions to drugs ; 13 regions extended the age limit for undocumented minors to 18 instead of 14 (minors are unconditionally registered in the SSN by law). |
↑4 | Except for emergency care, which was reimbursed by the Home Ministry (no data available). Since 2018, the dedicated line of budget has been merged with other expenditure items, making it impossible to retrieve the annual amount of reimbursement. |
↑5 | Agenas, 2013. La valutazione economica dell’assistenza sanitaria erogata agli immigrati : metodologia e primi risultati. Available on line [in Italian only]: https://www.agenas.gov.it/images/agenas/ricerca/agenas_ccm_corrente_finalizzata/LEA/La%20Salute%20pop%20immigrata/1_La_valutazione_economica_dellassistenza_sanitaria_erogata_agli_immigrati.pdf. |
To go further
- Busetta A., Cetorelli V. & Wilson B., 2018. “A Universal Health Care System ? Unmet Need for Medical Care Among Regular and Irregular Immigrants in Italy”, Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health, vol. 20, p. 416–421. DOI : 10.1007/s10903-017‑0566‑8.
- Falkenbach M., 2021. “The Evolution of the Populist Radical Right and Their Impact on Health in Italy”, in : Falkenbach M., Greer S.L. (dir.), The Populist Radical Right and Health. Springer, Cham, p. 79–94. DOI : 10.1007/978–3‑030–70709-5_5.
- International Organization for Migration, 2016. Summary Report on the MIPEX Health Strand and Country Reports. MRS n° 52. OIM, Genève. URL : https://publications.iom.int/books/mrs-no-52-summary-report-mipex-health-strand-and-country-reports
- Perna R., 2021. “Street-Level Workers, Managers and Institutional Tensions : A Comparative Ethnography of Healthcare Practices of In/Exclusion in Three Italian Public Organisations, CMS, vol. 9, n° 16. 10.1186/s40878-021–00224‑6.
The author
Roberta Perna holds a PhD in Political Sociology from the University of Torino (Italy). Currently, she is Marie Skłodowska-Curie post-doc fellow at the Centre d’Études de l’Ethnicité et des Migrations (Cedem) of the University of Liège. Her research interests include the relation between migration and healthcare systems from a comparative and multi-level perspective, and the politics of health deservingness in contemporary Europe.
To cite this article
Roberta Perna, « Healthcare for undocumented migrants in Italy : policy inclusiveness and exclusionary claims », in : Betty Rouland (dir.), Dossier « L’aide médicale d’État, la fabrique d’un faux problème », De facto [En ligne], 31 | Février 2022, mis en ligne le 28 février 2022. URL : https://www.icmigrations.cnrs.fr/en/2022/02/09/defacto-031–06/
Republication
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