Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Girl, 11, needs transplant­s

But will immigratio­n authoritie­s act quickly enough to help Miami-born child?

- BY MICHAEL MCAULIFF KHN

Nicolas Espinosa’s hopes for his 11-yearold daughter Julia are basic and profound: He wants her to stay alive and perhaps be able to eat normally someday.

And she might, if she can get three organs transplant­ed — and if the U.S. immigratio­n system doesn’t get in the way.

In a case that reflects the significan­t and often-heartbreak­ing failures in how the United States welcomes immigrants, the Espinosas are confrontin­g the nation’s complicate­d and expensive health care maze and also an immigratio­n system that Congress hasn’t reformed for decades. Despite calls for reform, immigratio­n policy largely has been set through scattersho­t legislatio­n and administra­tive actions, often modified by the courts.

Now, that chaotic reality is threatenin­g an American girl’s life.

Julia was born in Miami while her parents were attending college on student visas. She had a birth defect called volvulus, a twisted small intestine, and doctors saved her as a baby by removing most of the organ.

Never able to eat normally, Julia has survived by getting carefully crafted daily infusions of nutrients through an intravenou­s port in her chest, according to her father.

It’s extremely expensive and specialize­d care that Espinosa said Julia couldn’t get in his home country of Ecuador, where the couple initially had planned to return. Instead, the family moved to Seattle 10 years ago to be near Seattle Children’s Hospital, where specialist­s manage Julia’s nutritiona­l needs.

Still, getting nutrition through infusions isn’t something the human body was designed for, and it has done damage to her organs. She is on transplant lists for the small intestine that she lost at birth and to replace her deteriorat­ing liver and pancreas.

Their daughter’s health circumstan­ces would be challengin­g enough, but Espinosa and his wife, Maria Saenz, also face an ongoing battle with immigratio­n authoritie­s to stay and work legally in the United States. For the second time in three years, Espinosa faces the prospect of losing permission to work, which would cost him his job, providing tech support at a software company, and, as a result, his health insurance. Without insurance, his daughter would lose her eligibilit­y for transplant­s.

“We are relying on the current health insurance to keep her on the transplant list,” Espinosa said. “If I cannot keep my health insurance, then my daughter might not be eligible for a transplant.”

Acutely aware of his precarious position, Espinosa took steps early to renew his immigratio­n status, which is called “medical deferred action.”

The government says it will defer trying to deport people in that immigratio­n category so they can deal with a severe illness. People who have action deferred also can apply for a work permit.

Espinosa applied to renew his deferred action in November, though his current deferment was good until the end of July.

He heard nothing back from U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, though, until recently, and the approval came only after inquiries to the agency from members of Congress and a reporter.

But the family still can’t rest easy. Espinosa’s applicatio­n for a new work permit hasn’t been approved. He could still lose his job and insurance at the end of July if the new permit isn’t granted in time, which is far from a certainty.

A spokespers­on for Seattle Children’s Hospital said the hospital would work with the Espinosas to care for Julia if there is a lapse in her insurance, though her place in line on the transplant lists might be put on hold, leaving Espinosa to scramble for backup options like Medicaid.

Even with the uncertaint­y — a long gap in coverage could still prove catastroph­ic for the little girl — Espinosa said he is much more hopeful than he was just a week earlier since work permits generally are granted with deferred-action status.

Uncertaint­y is something Espinosa has gotten used to in a country in which there seems to be no rational system to deal with migrant families facing health crises.

“The problem is that there is no legal framework behind what I have,” Espinosa said. “Deferred action is not a visa, it’s just a decision from the government not to deport.”

If doctors can keep Julia alive, the family will face the same frightenin­g prospect of losing legal status when this new deferral ends in two years.

Exactly how many other families face similar circumstan­ces is not clear. Katie

Tichacek, a spokespers­on for the citizenshi­p agency, would not provide data showing how often such cases arise, and no statistics are publicly available. Data obtained by WBUR after Massachuse­tts lawmakers asked for it in 2020 said that there were more than 700 requests nationwide for deferred action for medical reasons in 2018 and that fewer than half were approved. Those numbers plummeted in 2019.

That was when Julia faced the first immigratio­n-related threat to her life. At the time, the Trump administra­tion suspended all medical deferred action. Facing lawsuits and a public outcry, the administra­tion relented, but Espinosa couldn’t work legally for a year and a half. Working off the books could have put him in further jeopardy. He said they survived on “mercy and family support” from relatives in Ecuador.

It hasn’t been a life of gloom and doom, though. The family has managed Julia’s condition so that she goes to school when there are no pandemic restrictio­ns, they travel, and she pursues her interests. Aside from being unable to survive by eating, she’s like any other girl.

“We’ve tried to live 100%, because we’ve been lucky to have Julia so far,” Espinosa said. “We’ve been always told that she might not make it. It was originally the first month of her life, then it was the first year, and then it’s two years, and then the next whatever period.”

They’ve beaten the odds by doing anything and everything that is in their control. What isn’t in their control is the federal bureaucrac­y. “We’re here still, but, yeah, we have to fight immigratio­n,” Espinosa said.

Even some of the things that are in their control, like choosing where to live to give Julia the best shot, can be problemati­c. Espinosa said some other states and regions of the country tend to have greater availabili­ty of organs. While Julia remains stable, staying where they are makes the most sense. The calculus would change if the deteriorat­ion of Julia’s liver were to accelerate.

“If that is the case, then we have to contemplat­e how are we going to be treated in these other states,” Espinosa said. “Like for example, getting a simple thing like your driver’s license, it’s not that simple when you have deferred action.”

Mahsa Khanbabai, a board member for the American Immigratio­n Lawyers Associatio­n, said the problem that Espinosa and other people in obvious need face is that Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services is overwhelme­d. An increasing­ly centralize­d and underfunde­d bureaucrac­y is not up to the task. “This is a very good example of a broken system,” Khanbabai said, noting that many more people are in less dramatic but similar situations. “There’s just a lot of heartbreak that could easily be fixed with immigratio­n reform.”

Tichacek said in a statement that the agency does not comment on specific cases but that it “is committed to promoting policies and procedures that protect those most vulnerable” and is working hard to rebuild trust with immigrants and expand access to vital immigratio­n services.

Espinosa is all too aware that even with media attention, legal assistance, and help from lawmakers, his family could still fall through the cracks. He doesn’t know what could happen then, but he will use whatever tools he can to save his child.

“I don’t know what I’ll need, and I’ll do whatever it takes,” he said.

 ?? NICOLAS ESPINOSA ?? Julia Espinosa is a U.S. citizen who needs high-tech care and three transplant­s because of a rare birth defect. Still, getting the continuing care she needs could be threatened because of uncertaint­ies regarding her parents’ efforts to remain and work legally in the United States.
NICOLAS ESPINOSA Julia Espinosa is a U.S. citizen who needs high-tech care and three transplant­s because of a rare birth defect. Still, getting the continuing care she needs could be threatened because of uncertaint­ies regarding her parents’ efforts to remain and work legally in the United States.
 ?? NICOLAS ESPINOSA ?? Julia Espinosa, seen as a newborn and now, has survived by getting daily infusions of nutrients through an intravenou­s port in her chest. She has beaten the odds and survived because her parents have done everything within their power to help her.
NICOLAS ESPINOSA Julia Espinosa, seen as a newborn and now, has survived by getting daily infusions of nutrients through an intravenou­s port in her chest. She has beaten the odds and survived because her parents have done everything within their power to help her.

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