by R. Cort Kirkwood
November 27, 2006
http://www.thenewamerican.com/artman/publish/article_4315.shtml
Before Hillary and gang push for socialized medicine maybe they should consider tougher border policies??
November 27, 2006
http://www.thenewamerican.com/artman/publish/article_4315.shtml
Before Hillary and gang push for socialized medicine maybe they should consider tougher border policies??
A survey of the research available shows that uninsured illegal immigrants are an imponderable burden on our nation's hospitals, in particular emergency rooms.
R. Cort Kirkwood is managing editor of the Daily News-Record in Harrisonburg, Virginia.
Jonathan Narvaez-Pena admitted to drinking 10-15 shots of tequila before getting into his Buick Park Avenue and speeding through the streets of Nashville on the night of October 21, 2006. Narvaez-Pena, an uninsured illegal alien with a prior arrest for driving without a license, ran numerous red lights before crashing into the Bumvu family's car. Antoine Bumvu, 43, and his two-year-old son, Eddy, were killed in the accident. Bumvu's wife, Josephine, and his six-month-old son, Tony, were seriously injured and taken to the hospital. Four other vehicles were involved in the crash and a total of 11 victims were taken to area hospitals, including Narvaez-Pena's two-year-old daughter, Hillary, who received massive facial trauma.
No amount of money can compensate the Bumvu family for the permanent loss of their loved ones. Nevertheless, taxpayers along with auto and medical insurance policy holders will end up being stuck with a hefty price tag for Narvaez-Pena's 11 victims. It is an all-too-common occurrence. According to Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), each day 13 Americans are killed by illegal aliens driving drunk. Many more are seriously, permanently injured.
Consider the plight of Tricia Ann Taylor, who lost both legs after being struck by speeding drunk driver Jose Carcamo in August 2002. Miss Taylor, then 17, and a friend, Noah Menard, then 20, were walking from a restaurant to Noah's car in Pontiac, Michigan, when Carcamo, an uninsured illegal alien with a police record of 17 previous violations and arrests, ran into them at a speed of 50 to 70 miles per hour. Taylor underwent several operations, including amputation of both of her legs. Mr. Menard sustained, among other injuries, a fractured skull and collarbone and a mangled elbow requiring surgery and the insertion of eight pins. The victims, the taxpayers, and the insurance rate payers not Mr. Carcamo picked up the expensive medical tab.
Javier Escarcega, a 21-year-old illegal who worked in an Omaha pizza parlor, was seriously injured as a passenger in a car driven by his illegal alien buddy. Six months of hospitalization and rehabilitation for the uninsured Escarcega came to about half a million dollars. Saul Diaz, an unemployed, uninsured 24-year-old illegal, racked up over $1 million in medical expenses at Atlanta's Gwinnett Medical Center after his automobile accident.
The medical expenses for Omar Santos-Cruz, a 17-year-old construction worker injured while working on a development in suburban Birmingham, Alabama, may end up costing millions. Jefferson County, Alabama, Circuit Judge G. William Noble has ruled that Santos-Cruz, an uninsured illegal alien from Mexico, must receive workman's comp benefits and medical care for the rest of his life.
Some Numbers
If you think you see a pattern here, you do. As national and local news reports about the aforementioned illegal aliens show, when it comes to their medical bills, the rest of us are left holding the bag. Indeed, a survey of the research available from a variety of organizations, from healthcare to immigration-policy groups, shows that uninsured illegal immigrants are an imponderable burden on the nation's hospitals, in particular emergency rooms. As they are with respect to other statistics regarding illegal immigration, the numbers on healthcare are startling. Calling them frightening would not overstate the matter. But the figures that study after study disclose are also appalling for what they show about the political elite's steadfast refusal to stop illegal immigration.
In June, an article in the Washington Post concluded that emergency-room care "is on the verge of collapse." From 1993 to 2003, the newspaper reported, the American population grew 12 percent, but emergency room visits grew 27 percent. "In that same period, however, 425 emergency departments closed, along with about 700 hospitals and nearly 200,000 beds." As well, in 2003, ambulances were diverted from emergency rooms 501,000 times because the emergency rooms were full.
But the article doesn't mention that much of this care is for routine, non-emergency illnesses. Nor does it mention a main cause in the crisis: uninsured illegal immigrants. Such an omission is surprising, given the news just one month earlier, reported in the New York Times and other papers: the Bush administration announced in May that it would send $1 billion to hospitals to pay for the care of illegal immigrants. "The largest allocations this fiscal year," the Times reported, "are going to California, which will receive $70.8 million; Texas, $46 million; Arizona, $45 million; New York, $12.3 million; Illinois, $10.3 million; Florida, $8.7 million; and New Mexico, $5.1 million." And the $70.8 million for California, the newspaper reported, won't come close to covering the cost of the state's $500 million bill for illegal immigrants.
According to the Washington Times, citing the American Hospital Association (AHA), "hospitals in 24 Southwest border counties in Arizona, California, Texas and New Mexico reported uncompensated care totaling nearly $832 million in 2000. A subsequent report prepared for the U.S.-Mexico Border Counties Coalition determined that about 25 percent of those nonreimbursed costs resulted from emergency medical treatment provided to undocumented immigrants." Reported ABC News, "researchers at the RAND Corporation, a nonpartisan think tank, analyzed data received from about 2,400 people in Los Angeles County in 2000 and 2001, and applied that information to the nation's undocumented population at large. The number of uninsured adults in the United States grew by about 8.7 million between 1980 and 2000. If the trend for Los Angeles County held true for the rest of the country, about a third of that growth can be attributable to illegal immigrants."
About 35 percent of immigrants are uninsured, data show, and 65 percent of illegal immigrants are uninsured. Citing data from Center for Immigration Studies, immigration writer Ed Rubenstein concluded, "Immigrants accounted for more than half 59 percent of the growth in the uninsured population during the 1992-2001 period. When you include the 3.5-million immigrants enrolled in Medicaid, almost half of all immigrants either are uninsured or have it provided to them at taxpayers' expense."
All these data point to a culprit in the crisis that shut down 700 hospitals and 425 emergency rooms in 10 years: illegal immigrants.
Hospitals must treat illegal immigrants gratis because of the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA) of 1985, which requires hospitals to treat all emergency cases, regardless of ability to pay. However, thanks to lawsuits by the ACLU, the militant lobbying of the "immigrant rights" agitators, and Medicaid profligacy, hospitals also routinely provide billions of dollars annually in non-emergency treatment to illegal aliens.
Anchor Babies
Much of our skyrocketing healthcare dilemma can be traced to the nonsensical court interpretations of the 14th Amendment to our Constitution granting instant citizenship to children of illegal aliens born in this country. These "anchor babies," who secure their families a foothold in the United States, are worth more than their weight in gold. The story of one illegal immigrant and his family provides a picture of the problem when multiplied by 13 million illegals. Writing in the Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons in 2005, the late medical lawyer, Madeline Cosman, reported the story of a family of illegals in Stockton, California:
Cristobal [last name deleted] came illegally from Oxtotilan, Mexico, in 1997 and brought his wife Felipa, plus three children aged 19, 12, and 8. Felipa, mother of the bride Lourdes (age 19), gave birth to a new daughter, her anchor baby, named Flor. Flor was premature, spent three months in the neonatal incubator, and cost San Joaquin Hospital more than $300,000. Meanwhile, Lourdes plus her illegal alien husband produced their own anchor baby, Esmeralda. Grandma Felipa created a second anchor baby, Cristian. Anchor babies are valuable. A disabled anchor baby is more valuable than a healthy one. The two ... anchor babies generate $1,000 per month in public welfare funding. Flor gets $600 per month for asthma. Healthy Cristian gets $400. Cristobal and Felipa last year earned $18,000 picking fruit. Flor and Cristian were paid $12,000 for being anchor babies. This illegal alien family's annual income tops $30,000.
Cristobal ... when drunk one Saturday night, crashed his van. Though he had no auto insurance or driver's license, and owed thousands of dollars, he easily bought another van. Stockton Police say that 44 percent of all hit and runs are by illegal aliens. If Cristobal had been seriously injured, the EMTALA-associated entitlement would provide, as it did for the four-year rehabilitation of a quadriplegic neighbor illegal alien. Rehabilitation costs customarily do not fall under the title emergency care. But partisans clamor to keep paraplegics in America rather than deport them to more primitive facilities south of the border.
"Anchor babies," such as those Dr. Cosman describes, are a key factor in rising, unpaid medical costs. Because illegal aliens cannot be turned away from hospitals, and because all children born in the United States receive citizenship, "anchor babies" are a double fiscal threat. The hospital must provide free medical care to mother and child. The parents are seldom deported since they must stay with the new American "citizen." Thus, an entire new family joins the "anchor baby" on the dole, as the case Cosman documented so well proves.
The Center for Immigration Studies provides alarming statistics regarding births to immigrants, legal and illegal, not least of which is that illegal immigrants account for 10 percent of all births in the United States:
"In 2002, 23 percent of all births in the United States were to immigrant mothers (legal or illegal), compared to 15 percent in 1990, 9 percent in 1980, and 6 percent in 1970."
"Even at the peak of the last great wave of immigration in 1910, births to immigrant mothers accounted for a slightly smaller share than today. After 1910 immigration was reduced, but current immigration continues at record levels, thus births to immigrants will continue to increase."
"Our best estimate is that 383,000 or 42 percent of births to immigrants are to illegal alien mothers. Births to illegals now account for nearly one out of every 10 births in the United States."
"The large number of births to illegals shows that the longer illegal immigration is allowed to persist, the harder the problem is to solve. Because as U.S. citizens these children can stay permanently, their citizenship can prevent a parent's deportation, and once adults they can sponsor their parents for permanent residence."
And the cost of illegal immigrant births? About $2 billion annually. Mexicans know the score when it comes to "anchor babies." Anchor babies provide benefits. Mexican ambulances cross the border to drop patients at American hospitals, knowing the patients will receive free care. Those patients include mothers in labor. About 3 million anchor babies, Rubenstein reports, have been born in the United States.
Frighteningly, in some states, immigrant births nearly exceed births to real Americans, and in too many counties to name, immigrant births exceed births to real Americans. In California, for instance, immigrants accounted for nearly 50 percent of all births. In Los Angeles County, about 56 percent of births are to immigrants, a pattern repeated across the country in county after county and city after city.
Even worse, however, a significant share of these immigrant births are births to illegals. In Arizona in 2002, CIS reported, illegals accounted for 56.4 percent of the births among immigrants and 17.2 percent of all births. In New Mexico, the figures were 55.1 and 9.7 percent; in Texas, 54.8 and 16.6 percent; in California, 47.7 and 22.1 percent. Breaking the statistics down to the county level, the picture gets worse. In Monterey, California, for instance, illegals accounted for 61.9 percent of immigrant births and 34.8 percent of all births. In Hidalgo, Texas, the figures were 64.4 and 33.4 percent, and in Lake County, Illinois, hardly a border state, the figures were 49.4 and 16.2 percent.
Given that 65 percent of illegal immigrants, according to CIS, do not carry health insurance, the ponderous burden of paying for their medical care, an average of $8,000 per birth for nearly 250,000 illegal immigrant mothers in 2002 alone, is self-evident except to the political elites looking for votes and supposedly cheap labor.
And these data don't touch upon another unpleasant subject: the loathsome diseases many of these illegals bring with them, which are more frightening than the coming collapse of the medical system groaning under the weight of border-jumping, uninsured illegals (see page 19).
Point is, when politicians suggest programs to ameliorate the plight of an alleged 43 million "uninsured Americans," they are not telling us that millions of the uninsured, for whom the rest of us pay the medical bills, are illegal immigrants. Cosman estimated that at least 25 percent of that 43 million, or nearly 11 million, are illegal immigrants. In other words, most of our estimated 10 to 20 million illegal immigrants are uninsured. Again, CIS reports that 65 percent of illegals are likely uninsured. American medicine is faced with a fiscal Waterloo. Most illegals don't have health insurance. That means real Americans pay the bills.
The Real Goal
Nothing less than the survival of the American healthcare system, the finest in the world, is at stake. Anyone willing to look at the facts on illegal immigration would conclude that Americans cannot continue to provide Mexico's poor huddled masses with free medical care, even if Americans were disposed to do so. Moreover, they have no obligation to do so.
But Americans must learn that the political and financial elites have a vested interest in ignoring the problem of illegal immigration even as they pretend to try stopping it. Illegal immigrants are a source of potential votes for leftist Democrats who know what the statistics show: immigrants compose an increasingly larger share of people on the welfare dole, which ensures a steady supply of those who will always vote to increase the subsidies they receive from the state.
Open-borders Republicans seek the cheap labor these immigrants provide to the internationalist-minded corporate elites who want to pay their labor force as little as possible, and who are not concerned about the long-term consequences unrestrained immigration will have on our country.
Thus are Americans confronted with entrenched and motivated forces on the question of illegal immigration, which, again, benefits the politicians who claim to be solving the problem.
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