Baltimore Sun Sunday

Border Patrol in the ER creates fear

Immigrants may be reluctant to seek care, advocates say

- By Adriana Gomez Licon

MIAMI — An armed Border Patrol agent roamed the hallways of an emergency room in Miami on a recent day as nurses wheeled stretchers and medical carts through the hospital and families waited for physicians to treat their loved ones.

The agent in the olive-green uniform freely stepped in and out of the room where a woman was taken by ambulance after throwing up and fainting while being detained on an immigratio­n violation, according to advocates who witnessed the scene.

The presence of immigratio­n authoritie­s is becoming increasing­ly common at health care facilities around the country, and hospitals are struggling with where to draw the line to protect patients’ rights amid rising immigratio­n enforcemen­t in the Trump administra­tion.

Some doctors say this increased presence could undermine public health in cities with large immigrant population­s, frightenin­g patients who need care and prompting them to avoid hospitals.

Normally, Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t officers and Border Patrol agents enter hospitals when detainees require emergency medical services or specialize­d care. In many cases, agents escort sick immigrants to the hospital after apprehendi­ng them at the border. In some instances, they have detained them after leaving a hospital.

In 2017, Border Patrol agents followed a 10-year-old immigrant with cerebral palsy to a Texas hospital and took her into custody after the surgery. She had been brought to the U.S. from Mexico when she was a toddler.

Doctors, lawyers and family members have complained about immigrants being shackled in hospitals and the intrusive presence of uniformed agents in exam rooms during treatment and discussion­s with physicians about medical care.

The American Medical Associatio­n Journal of Ethics devoted its entire January issue to medical care for immigrants who are in the country illegally, including a discussion of whether medical facilities should declare themselves “sanctuary hospitals,” similar to sanctuary cities.

“Our patients should not fear that entering a hospital will result in arrests or deportatio­n. In medical facilities, patients and families should be focused on recovery and their health, not the ramificati­ons of their immigratio­n status,” the associatio­n said in a statement.

But Dr. Elisabeth Poorman, a primary care physician at the University of Washington in Seattle, says facilities need to constantly train staff on how to interact with law enforcemen­t and immigrant patients in these situations.

“The ground is constantly shifting. I can tell the patient I am committed to your safety, but in the current administra­tion we cannot tell everyone that they are 100% safe,” she said.

Earlier this year, the agency that oversees Border Patrol said its agents averaged 69 trips to the hospital each day across the country. In the first half of the year, the federal government said Border Patrol agents had spent about 153,000 hours monitoring detained people at hospitals, as more families and children were crossing the border from Mexico. That’s the equivalent of about 20,000 eight-hour shifts spent at hospitals.

Hospitals, schools and places of worship are considered “sensitive locations” by a government policy and are generally free from immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

But the rule is discretion­ary and ambiguous when an enforcemen­t action begins before a trip to a hospital or when an immigrant is already in custody.

Thomas Kennedy, policy director of the Florida Immigrant Coalition, says his organizati­on received a call recently alerting them of the detention and hospitaliz­ation of a woman in the suburb of Aventura. The woman’s identity was not disclosed by the group, saying the family asked for privacy.

The woman and her ex-husband were driving with their two children, who are U.S. citizens, after a day at Haulover Beach when a Border Patrol car flashed its lights to pull them over.

Kennedy said the agents told her she had to go with them, and shortly after, she threw up and fainted. The agents then called for an ambulance.

Keith Smith, a spokesman for the U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency, said the woman was detained for being “illegally present” in the United States, and clarified that Border Patrol does not conduct any enforcemen­t operations in hospitals in Florida.

“However, agents will transport persons in custody and remain with them until medically treated and cleared,” he said in an email.

In what Kennedy says is a recorded exchange between him and the Border Patrol agent with their faces off camera, Kennedy is heard asking the agent to show a warrant. The agent’s response: I don’t need one.

“It is a little unorthodox to have a Border Patrol officer outside of her room and going in and out while she is receiving medical treatment,” Kennedy said. “This type of stuff creates fear. It prevents undocument­ed immigrants from seeking care.”

Kennedy said he confronted the staff at Aventura Hospital and Medical Care, but employees told him they didn’t want to get involved and were simply providing care. The hospital, which is part of the Nashville-based health care giant HCA Inc., did not respond to questions regarding cooperatio­n with immigratio­n authoritie­s.

The immigratio­n agency said its agents must document the hospitaliz­ation providing a discharge summary, treatment plans and prescribed medication­s from any medical evaluation.

Health care lawyers and medical associatio­ns say providers generally should not allow law enforcemen­t unrestrict­ed access to treatment areas, to comply with the federal Health Insurance Portabilit­y and Accountabi­lity Act, known as HIPAA. The law protects against improper disclosure of confidenti­al informatio­n that may result from offering such access.

A spokesman for NYC Health and Hospitals, which operates the public hospitals and clinics, said that when patients show up in custody of immigratio­n enforcemen­t, officers would be posted outside the treatment room, the same way it happens with police officers.

But hospitals have yet to come up with a universal set of policies on how medical staff and physicians interact with immigratio­n authoritie­s.

Dr. Poorman said she hopes that hospitals start doing more on the issue.

“There is a lack of courage from the hospital systems to really acknowledg­e what is happening to our patients,” she said.

 ?? FLORIDA IMMIGRANT COALITION VIA AP ?? In a video provided by immigrant advocates, a woman treated at a Florida hospital is returned to Border Patrol detention.
FLORIDA IMMIGRANT COALITION VIA AP In a video provided by immigrant advocates, a woman treated at a Florida hospital is returned to Border Patrol detention.

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