Florida hospitals ask immigrants about their legal status. Texas will
try it next
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[September 16, 2024]
McALLEN, Texas (AP) — For three days, the staff of an Orlando
medical clinic encouraged a woman with abdominal pain who called the
triage line to go to the hospital. She resisted, scared of a 2023
Florida law that required hospitals to ask whether a patient was in the
U.S. with legal permission.
The clinic had worked hard to explain the limits of the law, which was
part of Gov. Ron DeSantis’ sweeping package of tighter immigration
policies. The clinic posted signs and counseled patients: They could
decline to answer the question and still receive care. Individual,
identifying information wouldn't be reported to the state.
“We tried to explain this again and again and again, but the fear was
real,” Grace Medical Home CEO Stephanie Garris said, adding the woman
finally did go to an emergency room for treatment.
Texas will be the next to try a similar law for hospitals enrolled in
state health plans, Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance
Program. It takes effect Nov. 1 — just before the end of a presidential
election in which immigration is a key topic.
“Texans should not have to shoulder the burden of financially supporting
medical care for illegal immigrants,” Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott
said in a statement announcing his mandate, which differs from Florida's
in that providers don't have to tell patients their status won't be
shared with authorities.
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Both states have high numbers of immigrants, ranging from people who are
in the U.S. without legal permission to people who have pending asylum
cases or are part of mixed-status families. And while the medically
uninsured rate in these two states — neither of which have expanded
Medicaid — are higher than the national average, research has shown
immigrants tend to use less and spend less on health care.
Texas and Florida have a long history of challenging the federal
government’s immigration policies by passing their own. And their
Republican leaders say the hospital laws counter what they see as lax
enforcement at the border by the Biden administration — though Florida’s
early data is, by its own admission, limited.
Florida GOP state Sen. Blaise Ingoglia, who sponsored the hospital bill,
said in a written statement that the law is “the strongest, and most
comprehensive state-led, anti-ILLEGAL immigration law,” but did not
respond to The Associated Press' questions about the impact of the law
on the immigrant community or on hospital patients.
Luis Isea, an internal medicine doctor with patients in hospitals and
clinics in central Florida, said the law “is creating that extra
barrier” for patients who are already exposed to many disparities.
Immigrant advocate groups in Florida said they sent thousands of text
messages and emails and held clinics to help people understand the
limitations of the law — including that law enforcement agencies
wouldn't know an individual's status because the data would be reported
in aggregate.
But many outreach calls from health workers went unanswered. Some
patients said they were leaving Florida, as a result of the law’s impact
on getting health care and on employment; the DeSantis’ administration
tied the hospital mandate to other initiatives that invalidated some
driver’s licenses, criminalized transportation of migrants lacking
permanent status and changed employment verification policies.
Others, advocates say, languished in pain or needed to be persuaded.
Verónica Robleto, program director at the Rural Women's Health Project
in north central Florida, fielded a call before the law took effect in
July 2023 from a young woman who didn't have legal permission to be in
the U.S. and was afraid she would be separated from her child if she
gave birth at the hospital.
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A sign is displayed outside a hospital in Miami, on July 9, 2020.
(AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee, File)
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“She was very afraid (but) she did end up going after speaking with me,”
Robleto said.
Whatever data Florida and Texas do collect likely will be unreliable for
several reasons, researchers suggested. Health economist Paul Keckley
said the report released by Florida state officials could have
“incomplete or inaccurate or misleading” data.
For one, it’s self-reported. Anyone can decline to answer, an option
chosen by nearly 8% of people admitted to the hospital and about 7% of
people who went to the emergency room from June to December 2023, the
Florida state report said. Fewer than 1% of people who went to the
emergency room or were admitted to the hospital reported being in the
U.S. “illegally.”
The Florida Agency for Health Care Administration acknowledged large
limitations in their analysis, saying it didn't know how much of the
care provided to “illegal aliens” went unpaid. It also said it was
unable to link high levels of uncompensated care with the level of
“illegal aliens” coming to a hospital, saying it's “more associated with
rural county status than illegal immigration percentages."
The agency didn't immediately respond to requests for comment and more
information. Its report noted that for much of the last decade, the
amount of unpaid bills and uncollected debts held by Florida hospitals
has declined.
In Florida and in Texas, people who aren't in the U.S. legally can't
enroll in Medicaid, which provides health insurance for low-income
people — except in the case of a medical emergency.
Multiple factors can affect the cost of care for people who are in the
U.S. without legal permission, experts said, especially the lack of
preventive care. That's especially true for people who have progressive
diseases like cancer, said Dr. James W. Castillo II, the health
authority for Cameron County, Texas, which has about 22% of the
population uninsured compared to the state average of 16.6%.
At that point, he said, "it’s usually much harder to treat, much more
expensive to treat.”
Texas community groups, policymakers and immigration attorneys are
partnering with Every Texan, a nonprofit focusing on public policy and
health care access, to encourage people to not answer the status
question, said Lynn Cowles with Every Texan.
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And in Florida, the deportation fears are subsiding but questions about
the purpose of the law remain.
“How much of this is substantive policy and good policy versus how that
fared, I leave that for others to speculate,” said Garris with the
Orlando clinic. “But I know the practical effect of the law was
egregious and demeaning to patients who are living here, working here.
It’s just insulting.”
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Salomon reported from Miami, and Shastri reported from Milwaukee.
___
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