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Some may find it surprising that our government provides any medical reimbursement at all for illegals. Yet, Medicaid guidelines evidently contain a limited provision that underwrites the cost of emergency treatment for non-citizens. What’s happened is that the Federal government’s regulation-writers have now decided that chemotherapy, by its very nature, is never an emergency. Given the high cost of most forms of chemo, I can understand why government bean-counters would be inclined to make such a declaration. But, I still don't like it.
I’m glad our country covers the cost of emergency-room treatment, at least, for indigent people within our borders. It’s the humane thing to do. The word “hospital” has its roots in “hospitality,” after all. If the government didn’t provide any reimbursement at all, then hospitals would undoubtedly extend some level of care to illegal immigrants anyway, then write the expense off as a loss. Eventually – at least in the case of the most financially-stressed urban hospitals – some of that expense would find its way back to the government, in the form of subsidies that keep hospitals from going bankrupt and closing their doors.
I know a minister who works with Hispanic people in our local area. He’s escorted quite a number of them to the hospital, when they needed treatment, serving as interpreter and general go-between. Those who are here illegally often avoid seeking medical care, sometimes endangering their health and even their lives – even though the local hospitals aren’t particularly interested in reporting people to the INS. (I’m not sure they even can, under HIPAA privacy regulations.)
My colleague told one story about a young man who had broken his arm. He surely couldn’t go without treatment for something like that, nor could he travel back home to Mexico in pain. I presume Medicaid picked up most of the cost, although perhaps he paid some of it himself (he is employed, after all, which is why he’s in this country in the first place). I’m glad Medicaid is there to cover cases like his.
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Yet, what about chemotherapy? As the Times article points out, there’s a considerable gray area here. Some doctors evidently consider certain forms of chemotherapy to be an emergency treatment, or a palliative treatment in the case of pain. There are some cases when, if cancer is left untreated, it will soon become a true emergency, anyway.
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All this makes me feel fortunate, indeed, to have medical insurance, and – as a citizen – to have the minimal Medicaid safety net underneath me, should I ever lose my coverage and become indigent.
How is that I’m so fortunate as to live here, to be gainfully employed, and to receive some of the best cancer treatment available, while sisters and brothers from other lands must go without? That’s a question for another day. Yet, I’m grateful, all the same.