Code of Maryland Regulations
Title 10 - MARYLAND DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
Part 2
Subtitle 09 - MEDICAL CARE PROGRAMS
Chapter 10.09.24 - Medical Assistance Eligibility
Section 10.09.24.05 - Nonfinancial Eligibility Requirements - Citizenship
Universal Citation: MD Code Reg 10.09.24.05
Current through Register Vol. 51, No. 19, September 20, 2024
A. Eligibility. To be eligible for federal coverage of full Medical Assistance benefits, an individual shall be:
(1) A citizen of the United States,
including:
(a) An individual who was born in:
(i) One of the 50 states;
(ii) The District of Columbia;
(iii) Puerto Rico;
(iv) Guam;
(v) The Northern Mariana Islands;
or
(vi) The Virgin
Islands;
(b) A child
born outside of the United States if:
(i) The
federal requirements, including the requirements in the Child Citizenship Act
of 2000 (Public Law
106-395), are met for the child to automatically
acquire United States citizenship upon the child's lawful admission to the
United States for permanent residence;
(ii) At least one of the child's natural,
adoptive, or stepparents is a United States citizen by birth or
naturalization;
(iii) The child is
younger than 18 years old;
(iv) The
child is residing in the United States in the legal and physical custody of the
citizen or naturalized parent; and
(v) The child is a lawful permanent resident
of the United States;
(c) An individual who has been naturalized as
a United States citizen; or
(d) A
national from American Samoa or Swain's Island;
(2) A qualified alien, as specified in
§C of this regulation, who is eligible in accordance with the requirements
related to the 5-year bar specified at §D of this regulation;
(3) An honorably discharged veteran of the
armed forces of the United States;
(4) An alien on active duty in the armed
forces of the United States;
(5)
The lawfully admitted spouse, including a surviving spouse who has not
remarried, or lawfully admitted unmarried dependent child of an:
(a) Honorably discharged veteran of the armed
forces of the United States; or
(b)
Alien on active duty in the armed forces of the United States; or
(6) An alien who is:
(a) Eligible for and receiving Supplemental
Security Income (SSI);
(b) A member
of a federally recognized Indian tribe, as defined in
25 U.S.C. § 450b(e); or
(c) An American Indian born in Canada to whom
§ 289 of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) applies.
B. Veterans. Veterans of the following foreign armed forces are considered under this regulation to be veterans of the armed forces of the United States:
(1) Individuals who served in the Philippine
Commonwealth Army during World War II or as Philippine scouts following World
War II; and
(2) Hmong and other
Highland Lao veterans who fought under United States' command during the
Vietnam War and who were lawfully admitted to the United States for permanent
residence.
C. Qualified Aliens. According to § 431 of the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity and Reconciliation Act of 1996 (PRWORA), qualified aliens admitted to the United States shall include:
(1) The
following types of aliens, who may be subject to the 5-year bar specified at
§D of this regulation, depending on their most recent date of entry and
their date of qualified alien status:
(a)
Aliens who were lawfully admitted to the United States for permanent residence
or who since admission were granted lawful permanent resident status in
accordance with the INA;
(b) Aliens
granted parole for at least 1 year under § 212(d)(5) of the INA;
and
(c) A documented or
undocumented immigrant who was battered or subjected to extreme cruelty by the
individual's United States citizen or lawful permanent resident spouse or
parent, or by a member of the spouse's or parent's family residing in the same
household as the immigrant, if:
(i) The
spouse or parent consented to, or acquiesced in, the battery or
cruelty;
(ii) The abusive act or
acts occurred in the United States;
(iii) The individual responsible for the
battery or cruelty no longer lives in the same household as the
victim;
(iv) A Violence Against
Women Act immigration case or a family-based visa petition has been filed;
and
(v) There is a substantial
connection between the battery or cruelty and the need for Medical Assistance
benefits; and
(2) The following types of aliens, who are
not subject to the 5-year bar specified in §D of this regulation:
(a) Alien children and pregnant women who are
lawfully residing in the United States, including legal permanent residents who
have resided in the United States for less than 5 years as described under
§ 214 of the Children's Health Insurance Program Authorization Act of 2009
(CHIPRA);
(b) Aliens who were
lawfully admitted to the United States for permanent residence as Amerasian
immigrants under § 584 of the Foreign Operations, Export Financing and
Related Programs Appropriations Act of 1988;
(c) Refugees admitted under § 207 of the
INA;
(d) Aliens granted asylum
under § 208 of the INA;
(e)
Aliens whose deportation is being withheld under:
(i)
§ 243(h) of the INA as in effect
prior to April 1, 1997; or
(ii)
§ 241(b)(3) of the INA, as amended;
(f) Cuban or Haitian entrants, as defined at
§ 501(e) of the Refugee Education Assistance Act of 1980;
(g) Aliens granted conditional entry under
§ 203(a)(7) of the INA in effect before April 1, 1980;
(h) Children receiving federal payments for
foster care or adoption assistance under Part B or E of Title IV of the Social
Security Act, if the child's foster or adoptive parent is considered a citizen
or qualified alien; and
(i) Victims
of a severe form of trafficking, in accordance with § 107(b)(1) of the
Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000, who have been subjected to:
(i) Sex trafficking if the act is induced by
force, fraud, or coercion, or the individual who was induced to perform the act
was younger than 18 years old on the date that the visa application was filed;
or
(ii) Involuntary
servitude.
D. Five-Year Bar to Federal Medical Assistance for Qualified Aliens.
(1) Except
for coverage of emergency medical services specified at Regulation .05-2 of
this chapter, qualified aliens in the categories specified in §C(1) of
this regulation who entered the United States on or after August 22, 1996, were
not eligible for federally-funded Medical Assistance for 5 years from the date
that the qualified alien:
(a) Entered the
United States with the status of a qualified alien; or
(b) Obtained the status of a qualified alien,
if the individual did not enter the United States as a qualified
alien.
(2) The 5-year
bar specified in §D(1) of this regulation shall also be applied to
qualified aliens who entered the United States before August 22, 1996, but did
not remain continuously present in the United States from the last date of
entry before August 22, 1996 until the date of qualified alien
status.
(3) An alien is not
considered to be continuously present in the United States as specified in
§D(2) of this regulation if, before the date of qualified alien status,
the alien had:
(a) A single absence from the
United States of more than 30 days; or
(b) Absences from the United States totaling
more than 90 days.
(4)
The 5-year bar to eligibility for federal Medical Assistance benefits,
specified in §D(1) of this regulation, does not apply to:
(a) Qualified aliens in the categories
specified at:
(i)
§C(1) of this
regulation, who are not subject to the 5-year bar in accordance with §D(1)
or (2) of this regulation; or
(ii)
§C(2) of this regulation;
(b) A qualified alien who is:
(i) An honorably discharged veteran of the
armed forces of the United States;
(ii) On active duty in the armed forces of
the United States; or
(iii) The
lawfully admitted spouse, including a surviving spouse who has not remarried,
or lawfully admitted unmarried dependent child of an honorably discharged
veteran or individual on active duty in the armed forces of the United States;
and
(c) Lawful permanent
residents who:
(i) Entered the United States
under another exempt category specified at §D(4)(a)-(b) of this
regulation; and
(ii) Converted to
lawful permanent resident status.
(5) Effective December 1, 2009, as authorized
by the Children's Health Insurance Program Reauthorization Act of 2009
(CHIPRA), the 5-year bar will no longer apply to Medical Assistance or
Children's Health Insurance Program eligibility for pregnant women and children
who are qualified aliens.
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