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Trump’s visa ban creates lack of young doctors

Leaders fear effects of shortage ahead of second wave of virus

- By Dara Lind

As hospitals across the United States brace for a difficult six months — with the first wave of the coronaviru­s pandemic still raging and concerns about a second wave in the fall — some are acutely shortstaff­ed because of an illtimed change to immigratio­n policy and its inconsiste­nt implementa­tion.

A proclamati­on issued by President Donald Trump on June 22, barring the entry of most immigrants on work visas, came right as hospitals were expecting a new class of medical residents. Hundreds of young doctors were unable to start their residencie­s on time.

Trump’s order included the H1-B visa for highly skilled workers, which is used by some practicing doctors abroad who get U.S. residency slots. The proclamati­on stated that doctors “involved with the provision of medical care to individual­s who have contracted COVID-19 and are currently hospitaliz­ed” should be exempt from the ban, but it delegated the issuing of guidance to the department­s of State and Homeland Security. That guidance has been slow and inconsiste­nt.

Many consulates started approving doctors’ visas on

Thursday, after ProPublica asked the State Department about the delay. Others say they’re still awaiting guidance.

At hospitals where many incoming residents are visa holders, even a delay of a few weeks in arriving in the U.S. creates a staffing crisis. Doctors and administra­tors are afraid that the repercussi­ons will last for the rest of the year — leaving them overworked and ill-prepared even before a second wave of the virus hits.

ProPublica has heard from 10 would-be medical residents stuck abroad because of H1-B visa issues. Six of them had gotten emergency consulate appointmen­ts for visa approval, but when they arrived for meetings they were told their visas could not be approved. Three were still waiting on DHS approval for their visas, a necessary step before a visa gets a consulate stamp. One resident had applicatio­n approval but was denied an emergency consulate interview appointmen­t because of the ban. All were destined for hospital positions treating COVID-19 patients.

The State Department told ProPublica on Tuesday that it, “in conjunctio­n with the Department of Homeland Security and interagenc­y partners, is establishi­ng and implementi­ng procedures” for the visa ban, and that it “has communicat­ed and will continue to communicat­e implementa­tion procedures” to consulates abroad.

On Thursday, the State Department’s website posted guidance, spelling out that doctors treating COVID-19 patients were exempt from the ban. On that day, many of the residents ProPublica spoke to said they had suddenly received visa approvals. “A quite remarkable turnaround, given that I received a rejection email three days ago,” one said. In at least five countries, however, consulates were still not processing doctors’ visas.

The Committee of Interns and Residents, an affiliate of the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union, has heard from over 250 interns stuck abroad. Over 150 of them are on H-1B visas.. (The others are on visas that weren’t covered in Trump’s ban, but can’t get approval because their consulates are still closed due to the pandemic.) Union president Jessica Edwards pointed out to ProPublica that while that number may sound small, each intern is responsibl­e for the care of thousands of patients.

As of 2017, there were 2,532 medical residents on H1-B visas, according to the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n — though the Trump administra­tion’s continued restrictio­ns to legal immigratio­n may have made it less appealing for hospitals to sponsor visas in the last few years. But the impact on hospitals is highly concentrat­ed in the less-prestigiou­s hospitals that tend to rely on residents from overseas.

At one New York City hospital serving low-income residents, nearly half the incoming class is still stuck abroad, multiple sources confirmed to ProPublica. One hospital in a large Midwestern city told ProPublica that “roughly half ” of its first-year doctors started on time. In the Deep South, a region now overwhelme­d by COVID-19 cases, a doctor who was set to start told ProPublica he was among 10 residents still awaiting visa approval as of early July. All hospitals and doctors spoke to ProPublica on the condition of anonymity because they worried about jeopardizi­ng their visa applicatio­ns.

ProPublica has also spoken to more-experience­d doctors facing the same issue — including an infectious-disease specialist blocked from starting a job in an area of the Western U.S. where COVID-19 cases are rising.

When there aren’t enough incoming residents to replace departing third-year residents, staffing crunches result.

At the New York City hospital, a doctor told ProPublica that after only 10 days of short-staffing, one resident had called in sick from exhaustion. The doctor recounted a recent shift in which there had only been two junior residents on call, compared with the typical six. Even by having residents work individual­ly instead of in teams of two, they couldn’t keep up with new patient admissions.

“The patients had to just stay there waiting in the (emergency department) for the residents to finish their first admission, in order to see them,” the doctor said. “When the shift was over, I logged into the computer and I would see notes written at 10 p.m., 11 p.m. And these residents are expected to go home and then come back again at 6:30 a.m.”

Even at hospitals with decreasing COVID-19 caseloads, shortstaff­ing is a bigger problem than it was in pre-pandemic times. Some hospitals are seeing a “surge of non-COVID patients” who were unable to get care for chronic conditions like heart disease during lockdown and are now deteriorat­ing, a doctor at a short-staffed hospital told ProPublica. And because protocols prevent doctors from switching back and forth between COVID-19 and non-COVID-19 patients, the hospital needs to keep more doctors on-call to maintain staffing levels in both wards.

“If someone is getting acutely ill, who will see them?” a hospital administra­tor told ProPublica. “I’ve got my poor residents running around trying to make sure everyone is seen in a timely manner. And residents are great, but they can only be in one place at one time.”

Some of these problems will be fixed as residents receive delayed visa approvals and are able to come. But it will take weeks, if not months, to successful­ly onboard them. The Midwestern hospital anticipate­s that arriving residents may not be able to start until midAugust. In the meantime, they’re understaff­ing services and using fourth-year medical students in place of residents.

Hospitals are used to a summertime efficiency gap, as new interns learn the ropes. This year, it could persist into fall — when a second wave of coronaviru­s infections is expected.

“I’m really worried that in three months,” said the medical administra­tor, “we’re going to have a bunch of residents who are just exhausted and just getting into the worst part of the fall, flu and COVID season.”

These doctors already had to push themselves through the first wave of COVID-19 this spring. Furthermor­e, at hospitals hardest hit by the visa ban, the residents picking up the slack are often themselves H1-B visa holders whose futures are now uncertain. Trump’s ban didn’t revoke visas for anyone currently in the U.S., but if they leave the country — which they will have to do if they change jobs — their ability to return is unclear. Some of the doctors interviewe­d by ProPublica were living in the U.S. before the pandemic and returned home partly to get visa approval for their new jobs. One doctor ended up stuck in India while her husband was unable to travel there from the U.S.

Another doctor from India, now working in the U.S., told ProPublica: “My parents, they’re (in India) by themselves, and both of them are about 70. At some point, probably, they will catch the infection.” If that happens, the doctor plans to leave the U.S. to care for them — “and if I don’t come back, I don’t come back. At this point, I really don’t care.”

The feeling that the U.S. doesn’t value them is compounded among residents who’ve already lived through the first wave of COVID-19 and who are now facing overwork and visa uncertaint­y.

Some said other countries are making it easier for doctors to immigrate, while the U.S. leaves them in limbo.

“We feel underappre­ciated for what we’re doing,” the New York City resident said. “And what else can you do, more than sacrificin­g your life?”

Tightly regimented residency schedules can be tricky for H1-B visa holders even in the best cases. Doctors find out in mid-March if they are “matched” with a U.S. hospital, where they’ll be expected to start at the beginning of July. DHS often takes longer than that to approve H1-B applicatio­ns. Employers can pay for expedited processing to guarantee a decision within five days — but DHS shut down its expedited processing on March 22 because of COVID-19 and didn’t reopen it until June 8.

Shortly afterward, Trump issued his proclamati­on banning entries on many visa types, including the H1-B.

Most people coming to the U.S. for residencie­s arrive on a different kind of visa, the J-1, and aren’t covered by Trump’s ban, though some have had issues getting consulate appointmen­ts because of the COVID-19 pandemic. But doctors do identical work regardless of their visa types. If anything, doctors with H1-Bs are more qualified than those with J-1s, since they’re required to have completed all three phases of the taxing U.S. Medical Licensing Exam before starting residencie­s. Residents with H1-B visas were practicing doctors in their home countries, working alongside new medical-school grads from the U.S.

An earlier immigratio­n ban targeting permanent immigrants, which passed in March, contained a broad medical worker exemption.

When rumors of a work-visa ban started swirling in late spring, immigratio­n lawyers and hospitals expected it would include the same language. Instead, the June proclamati­on mentioned only doctors working with hospitaliz­ed COVID-19 patients.

Every resident who spoke with ProPublica had provided evidence to the U.S. government that they met that descriptio­n. Some were told by consular officers that they were probably exempt. But until they received State Department guidance, they had to place their visas in “administra­tive processing” — an indefinite holding pattern.

ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigat­es abuses of power.

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