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Immigrants Swamp Border Hospitals
ABQ Journal | 12-13-02 | Lynn Brezosky - AP

Posted on 12/13/2002 1:55:06 PM PST by B-Cause

Friday, December 13, 2002

Immigrants Swamp Border Hospitals

By Lynn Brezosky The Associated Press

BROWNSVILLE, Texas — Ambulances regularly race across the bridges of the Rio Grande, bringing some of Mexico's most ill to the nearest U.S. emergency room.

Obligated by federal law, the hospitals provide the care and worry later about whether the billing addresses patients give them are accurate. Often the addresses are false — and the hospitals get stuck with the bill.

Immigrant patients have inflated medical expenses for insurance companies, Medicaid and paying customers, officials say, and are overwhelming already busy hospitals in one of the nation's fastest-growing regions.

One recent study by the U.S.-Mexico Border Counties Coalition, an American lobbying group, found U.S. border hospitals provided at least $200 million a year in uncompensated emergency care to illegal immigrants — $74 million of that in Texas.

"Shh, don't tell Iowa farmers that part of their taxes are paying for trauma that occurs south of the border," Dr. Lorenzo Pelly, a south Texas doctor, told state lawmakers at a recent hearing.

Republican state Sen. Chris Harris said he was shocked by what he called the "dumping" of Mexicans on U.S. hospitals.

$500,000 per month

Policymakers are just beginning to assess the size of the problem.

Brownsville Medical Center estimates losses averaging at least $500,000 per month. At Thomason Hospital in El Paso, officials said their first attempt to estimate the cost found $1 million over just three months.

Thomason Hospital responded by retaining a Mexican lawyer and requiring patients to sign "pagares," or promissory notes, that carry weight under Mexican law. It also signed on with a firm that specializes in collecting past due accounts in Mexico.

Even without the influx from Mexico, U.S. border hospitals are straining to meet the region's growing medical needs. Some have resorted to importing doctors and offering nurses tuition grants and signing bonuses.

But the load really jumped as Mexicans looking for work stream to factories along the border. The North American Free Trade Agreement has stimulated business on both sides of the border, but hospitals have not kept up.

NAFTA "lacks the social economic infrastructure and capacity" to address the growth, said Eva Moya of the Mexico Border Health Commission, made up of U.S. and Mexican officials.

For the sick or injured on the Mexican side of the border, the choice in a life-or-death situation can be a three-hour journey inland to Monterrey, Mexico, or a minutes-long trip to Brownsville, Laredo or El Paso.

The issue drew attention in September, when 4-year-old Larissa Guajardo, a U.S. citizen, died of heart problems after crossing the Hidalgo-Reynosa international bridge on the way to a hospital. Family members blamed a delay caused by immigration officials, who would not let the mother enter the country. The mother lacked paperwork and had crossed the border illegally before.

The Immigration and Naturalization Service said the inspection process took only a few minutes and that inspectors did not know the girl's illness was critical. Once the seriousness was discovered, the mother was allowed to enter on humanitarian grounds, the INS said.

Down to a science

The Sept. 11 attacks have also complicated the situation along the border, with some authorities worrying about what the ambulances might be holding.

"It is a security threat if they are going across the border unchallenged, but at the same time, we don't want to interfere with an emergency procedure," said Carl Rusnok of the INS in Dallas.

The B&M International Bridge, which links Brownsville with Matamoros, Mexico, has emergency crossings down to a science, said Joe Galvan, president of the company that runs it. The company has its own security guards staffing both sides of the crossing, and in medical emergencies a call goes out for the U.S. side to clear a lane for fast passage.

Under a 1986 federal law, U.S. hospitals must treat anyone who seeks emergency care, without regard to immigration status or ability to pay. The government gives hospitals extra funding to help poorer regions absorb the costs of unreimbursed care, but hospitals say it is not enough.

"This becomes a particular philosophical question that these doctors are having," said Dominic Dominguez, an administrator at Brownsville Medical Center. "Part of my signing to serve in this community is, I'll cover this emergency room. But I didn't sign on to cover Mexico."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: ambulances; borderpatrol; hospitals; illegals; ins
Stop them at the borders! - Now!
1 posted on 12/13/2002 1:55:06 PM PST by B-Cause
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To: B-Cause
A true story: About one year ago I had to have some medical tests run, and was required to have some routine blood work done in the hospital prior to the tests. (This is in Southern Mexifornia). About one month later, I received an explaination of benefits from my insurance company showing that they had paid their part and the rest was up to me. The total bill for a "routine CBC" was $987.00. I called the billing office at the hospital to see what the error was, and was told by a very honest hospital employee "you have insurance and a job, you are paying an inflated charge to cover unpaid costs incurred by illegals, who are heavy burdens on the hospital".
2 posted on 12/13/2002 2:00:49 PM PST by luckodeirish
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To: luckodeirish
Put this on your favorites & become active in saving this country.. http://www.tombstonetumbleweed.com
3 posted on 12/13/2002 2:23:12 PM PST by Digger
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To: B-Cause
The issue drew attention in September, when 4-year-old Larissa Guajardo, a U.S. citizen, died of heart problems after crossing the Hidalgo-Reynosa international bridge on the way to a hospital. Family members blamed a delay caused by immigration officials, who would not let the mother enter the country. The mother lacked paperwork and had crossed the border illegally before.

TRANSLATION: Mommy made it across the border illegally, and had the child on US soil so she could then use her position as the child's guardian to petition herself into the USA legally.

4 posted on 12/13/2002 2:30:29 PM PST by ikka
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To: Digger
Will do, thanks!
5 posted on 12/13/2002 2:44:12 PM PST by luckodeirish
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To: luckodeirish
Bump

"you have insurance and a job, you are paying an inflated charge to cover unpaid costs incurred by illegals, who are heavy burdens on the hospital".


What an absolute crime!



6 posted on 12/13/2002 2:48:16 PM PST by B-Cause
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To: ikka
Bump
7 posted on 12/14/2002 11:26:18 AM PST by B-Cause
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Comment #8 Removed by Moderator

Comment #9 Removed by Moderator

To: Bruno
Who was the republican on O'reilly the other night that said illegals were paying taxes so that made everything ok???
10 posted on 12/14/2002 11:44:02 AM PST by chasio649
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To: Bruno
Bump

This law has got to be changed . . . .

Right on - it needs to changed fast - like in January when congress returns.

11 posted on 12/14/2002 3:45:40 PM PST by B-Cause
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