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Atlanta Hospital's Plan to Shut Clinic Sparks Lawsuit

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Filed: Country: Belarus
Timeline
Posted

SEPTEMBER 24, 2009, 11:06 A.M. ET

The Wall Street Journal

Atlanta Hospital's Plan to Shut Clinic Sparks Suit

By MIKE ESTERL

ATLANTA -- Publicly funded Grady Memorial Hospital has served as a lifeline for this city's indigent for more than a century, but a plan to shutter its dialysis clinic has sparked a lawsuit on behalf of dozens of undocumented immigrants who say the decision amounts to a death sentence.

The case in Fulton County Superior Court throws into sharp relief some of the hottest issues in ongoing skirmishes over health care and the government's role in providing medical services: how and whether undocumented aliens should receive free treatment, and how far hospitals must go to provide lifesaving care for them.

"The issue is, do my clients have a fundamental right to life?" said Lindsay Jones, an attorney for the plaintiffs, during a packed hearing before Judge Ural Glanville on Wednesday.

Mr. Jones said one elderly patient, a partially paralyzed and undocumented immigrant from Colombia who was wheeled into the courtroom on a bed, recently returned from Florida after being told he wasn't immediately eligible for regular dialysis treatment there. He had been receiving such treatment at Grady.

Bernard Taylor, a lawyer for Grady, told the judge that the charity hospital can no longer afford to provide regular dialysis treatment for the slightly fewer than 100 patients of the clinic. He said the clinic is posting annual losses of about $2 million and would require another $2 million to bring the facility up to date even though it serves a tiny portion of the hospital's patient base.

Mr. Taylor said Grady has taken steps to help about 90% of the patients find alternative care and is committed to finding solutions for the remaining patients, who require dialysis to prevent kidney failure. Grady is the only large hospital in Atlanta still providing regular dialysis for undocumented immigrants -- most of whom can't afford the treatment, which typically costs a few hundred dollars a session.

Judge Glanville said he expected to rule on the matter later this week. He ordered a temporary injunction last Thursday -- one day before Grady planned to close the dialysis clinic -- requiring the hospital to continue providing the service until it presents "a suitable alternative treatment plan" for affected patients.

Grady estimates about two-thirds of the patients who use its dialysis clinic are undocumented immigrants without health insurance. Mexicans make up the largest single group; others are from countries including El Salvador, Nigeria, Egypt, India and Cambodia.

The dispute highlights conflicting views in state capitals of what constitutes emergency care. Under U.S. law, hospitals are required to treat patients in danger of death regardless of their immigration status or ability to pay. Treatment typically takes place in emergency rooms, with the resulting costs split between the states and the federal government.

Some states also offer undocumented immigrants regular dialysis treatment three times a week outside of the emergency room if the patients don't have money or insurance. That is because many such patients would return to the emergency room every two weeks or die without regular treatment. Local hospitals can then be reimbursed under Medicaid, a state-federal health-care plan. But other states, including Georgia, don't approve regular dialysis treatment under Medicaid.

"States have flexibility" in determining what qualifies as an emergency medical condition, said Mary Kahn, a spokeswoman at the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the federal agency that oversees government-funded health care benefits.

Grady has nearly 1,000 beds, serving mostly the poor and uninsured in downtown Atlanta since 1892. It posted an overall loss of $33.5 million last year and relies heavily on federal funding to support operations. Two local counties have provided massive subsidies to bridge Grady's deficits.

In an effort to shore up the finances, management of Grady was handed over to a nonprofit corporation last year. The board is chaired by A.D. "Pete" Correll, the former head of Georgia-Pacific Corp. But the hospital is still owned by the public Fulton-Dekalb Hospital Authority.

Grady says it can't afford to keep running the money-losing dialysis clinic without cutting off essential services to other patients in need. It says funds currently being spent on treating nearly 100 dialysis patients could finance 75,000 outpatient visits at its neighborhood health centers, which provide preventive care.

"Those who are less fortunate or who have less access to care will always have a home at Grady. But even in that context, Grady has some tough decisions to make. Otherwise, we won't be in business," said Matt Gove, a senior vice president at the hospital.

The hospital began informing dialysis patients earlier this summer that it would be closing the clinic. It recommended patients return to their home countries for treatment or move to one of about a dozen states it says provide the service for undocumented immigrants under Medicaid. Grady also has offered some financial assistance.

Salvador De Lara, the Mexican consul general in Atlanta, said half a dozen Mexican patients had returned to their home country as of Tuesday. He said the consulate was working to ensure continued care for the repatriated patients in Mexico and helping them financially.

But several patients told The Wall Street Journal they still hadn't lined up alternative care and weren't sure where to go if the Grady clinic shuts down.

"I don't know what I'm going to do," said Rosa Lira Ramirez, a 78-year-old immigrant from Mexico who lives in the Atlanta area. She said she obtained a U.S. permanent resident card four years ago but that she won't qualify for medical benefits until next year.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB125379759000037539.html

"Credibility in immigration policy can be summed up in one sentence: Those who should get in, get in; those who should be kept out, are kept out; and those who should not be here will be required to leave."

"...for the system to be credible, people actually have to be deported at the end of the process."

US Congresswoman Barbara Jordan (D-TX)

Testimony to the House Immigration Subcommittee, February 24, 1995

Filed: Lift. Cond. (apr) Country: Egypt
Timeline
Posted

0h well.

Don't just open your mouth and prove yourself a fool....put it in writing.

It gets harder the more you know. Because the more you find out, the uglier everything seems.

kodasmall3.jpg

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Philippines
Timeline
Posted

Why are they allowed to sue? When they show up for court, deport them.

K-1 Visa

Service Center : California Service Center

Consulate : Manila, Philippines

I-129F Sent : 2009-08-14

I-129F NOA1 : 2009-08-18

I-129F NOA2 : 2009-10-23

NVC Received : 2009-10-27

NVC Left : 2009-11-06

Consulate Received : 2009-11-12

Packet 3 Received : 2009-11-27

Interview Date : 2009-12-16

Interview Result : APPROVED

Second Interview

(If Required):

Second Interview Result:

Visa Received :

US Entry :

Marriage :

Comments :

Processing

Estimates/Stats : Your I-129f was approved in 66 days from your NOA1 date.

Your interview took 120 days from your I-129F NOA1 date.

Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Vietnam
Timeline
Posted

they should go home to get the medical care they need and then try to come back to the states illegally in the manner in which they came the first time! lol... :P j/k

that's true regarding emergency care vs maintenance care though...which is is...if its the first, everyone deserves emergency care...if it's the latter, i don't think illegal immigrants should not be able to sue (if it's even possible!) :P

CR1/IR1 Timeline:

GENERAL INFO

[*]12-xx-2007 - 1st Trip (6wks) & Met him halfway around the world

[*]03-xx-2008 - Got engaged - two people on opposite sides of the world

[*]05-xx-2008 - 2nd Trip (2wks) - Engagement/Marriage/Consummation

[*]06-12-2008 - Filed I-130 (CR-1) with Vermont Service Center

[*]12-xx-2008 - 3rd Trip (4wks)

[*]06-05-2009 - Interview at 9:00am at HCMC Consulate (result: blue)

[*]07-08-2009 - Submitted RFE: Beneficiary's Relatives & Evidence of Relationship

[*]08-xx-2009 - 4th Trip (4wks)

[*]10-07-2009 - AP 91 days - Result: APPROVED!!

[*]10-31-2009 - POE: Detroit, MI

[*]11-18-2009 - Social Security Card

[*]11-20-2009 - Green Card

[*]01-21-2010 - Driver's License

THE NEXT STEPS...

[*]02/07/2011 - Renew Vietnam Passport

[*]07/30/2011 - Process of Removing Conditions Begins

[*]09/25/2011 - Date of I-751

[*]09/28/2011 - NOA1

[*]10/19/2011 - Biometrics

Filed: AOS (apr) Country: Philippines
Timeline
Posted

This won't be an issue in the future as Obama has assured us all that no illegal aliens will be covered under Obamacare.

David & Lalai

th_ourweddingscrapbook-1.jpg

aneska1-3-1-1.gif

Greencard Received Date: July 3, 2009

Lifting of Conditions : March 18, 2011

I-751 Application Sent: April 23, 2011

Biometrics: June 9, 2011

 

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