Maryland Hospitals Weigh Options of New Immigration Law
Wednesday, September 1, 2004 at 12:15AM
TheSpook
New Law Kicks in Today
Beginning today, cash-strapped hospitals nationwide will
be able to earn extra money by asking emergency room patients whether
they are in the United States legally. But aspects of the plan make
officials at Maryland's hospitals uncomfortable. So far, they are
merely weighing their options. Congress has allocated $250 million per
year over the next four years to hospitals that ask patients'
immigration status and photocopy their citizenship papers. The Centers
for Medicare and Medicaid Services plan to oversee the process, meant
to help hospitals deal with uncompensated care from undocumented
immigrants. In Maryland, that could translate to about $1.3 million
annually. Many hospitals, however, are not eager to take on the role of
police officers and possibly deter patients from visiting emergency
rooms. "It puts health care providers in an area that deters patients
from seeking health care," said Nancy Fiedler, spokeswoman for the
Maryland Hospital Association.
"Hospitals are caregivers, not cops," said David Allen, of the American
Hospital Association. "You need to have caregivers focused on caring
for patients, not being active border patrol agents." [more ]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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