Health Care News Bytes
The
North Carolina Court of Appeals has ruled that the state must expand Medicaid to
cover illegal immigrants to allow for longer treatment for serious health
problems. This ruling can expand
the number of medical treatments that illegal immigrants in North Carolina are
able to receive and may allow hospitals that already treat illegal immigrants to
receive more Medicaid reimbursements.
The
panel of appellate judges found that the state’s Department of Health and
Human Services had misapplied Medicaid rules in the treatment of an undocumented
worker from Mexico, Benito Luna. Luna
was admitted to Moses Cone Hospital in Greensboro, North Carolina in December
1999, where doctors discovered that he had cancer of the spine.
Two days after being admitted, doctors operated on Luna and gave him
chemotherapy for the next month. State
and county Medicaid officials paid the hospital for the surgery but not the
chemotherapy.
Medicaid
does not fully cover illegal immigrants, but federal and state regulations
require that the program must cover treatment for emergency medical services
given to the poor. State officials
had denied the chemotherapy claim because they felt that the surgery had
stabilized Luna’s condition. The
court found that the state and a lower court had not considered that Luna’s
health could have seriously deteriorated without the chemotherapy treatments.
The
appellate decision can be found online at http://www.aoc.state.nc.us/www/public/coa/opinions/2004/020557-1.htm.
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The
El Paso Service Processing Center, the immigration detention facility in El
Paso, Texas, is has taken on the role of a mini-hospital for detainees.
Between 150 and 200 come to the center for medicine, exams, blood
analysis, X-rays and dental work. The
Joint Commission on Accreditation of Health Care Organizations, the National
Commission on Correctional Health Care and the Commission on Accreditation for
Corrections recently accredited the detention facility.
The
detention facility houses about 700 immigrants and its medical center has a
physician, a psychiatrist, nurses and a visiting dentist, most of whom are
bilingual.
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A
provision of the Medicare bill provides $1 billion for hospitals that provide
emergency medical care for undocumented immigrants.
Much of this money will be allocated over a period of four years to
hospitals in states that have the highest numbers of undocumented migrants.
The Department of Health and Human Services still needs to determine how
much money should be given to the individual hospitals that qualify.
By
law, hospitals cannot turn away patients who need emergency medical care, nor
can they ask about a patient’s immigration status.
Health care analysts estimate that hospitals pay $2 billion to treat
undocumented immigrants who cannot pay their bills.
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Representative
Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA)
introduced
HR 2722 to Congress on January 21, which would limit health care to illegal
immigrants. The bill proposes to
hold employers who employ illegal immigrants responsible for their healthcare
bills. The bill would also require
hospitals that receive federal funding for treating illegal immigrants to ask
their patients whether they are US citizens and enter information about
non-citizens into a database. The
database could then be accessed and used by the Department of Homeland Security.
According to Rohrabacher’s office, since introduction of the bill, the Representative and his staff have received several death threats and abusive phone calls.
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Disclaimer: This newsletter is provided as a public service and not intended to establish an attorney client relationship. Any reliance on information contained herein is taken at your own risk.