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Immigration
See other Immigration Articles

Title: Moral dilemma. Would you deport his kid back to Mexico w/o medical care?
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.boston.com/news/nation/a ... migrants_stir_debate_in_calif/
Published: Apr 21, 2008
Author: MSNBC
Post Date: 2008-04-21 08:23:16 by Jethro Tull
Keywords: None
Views: 1464
Comments: 52

LOS ANGELES - Ana Puente was an infant with a liver disorder when her aunt brought her illegally to the United States to seek medical care. She underwent two liver transplants at the University of California, Los Angeles Medical Center as a child in 1989 and a third in 1998, each paid for by the state.

But when Puente turned 21 in June, she aged out of her state-funded health insurance and the ability to continue treatment at UCLA.

This year, her liver began failing again and she was hospitalized at County-USC Medical Center, affiliated with the University of Southern California. In her Medi-Cal application, a USC doctor wrote, "Her current clinical course is irreversible, progressive and will lead to death without another liver transplant." The application was denied.

The county gave her medication but does not have the resources to perform transplants.

Late last month Puente learned of another, little-known option for patients with certain healthcare needs. If she notified US Citizenship and Immigration Services that she was in the country illegally, state health officials might grant her full coverage through Medi-Cal, the state health services assistance program for the poor. Puente did so, her benefits were restored, and she is awaiting a fourth transplant at UCLA.

Puente's case highlights two controversial issues: Should illegal immigrants receive liver transplants in the United States and should taxpayers pick up the cost?

The average cost of a liver transplant and first-year follow-up is nearly $490,000, according to the United Network for Organ Sharing. Donor livers are in scarce supply. In California, nearly 3,700 people are on a waiting list for livers, according to the network. Last year, more than 90 percent were given to US citizens.

Donor livers generally are allocated through a geographic-based distribution system on the basis of how sick the patients are and how long they have been on the transplant waiting list. Immigration status does not play a role in allocating organs. But some people say that it should.

"All transplants are about rationing," said Roy Beck, executive director of NumbersUSA, which favors stricter controls on immigration. "I just don't think the public ought to be funding any kind of benefits for people who are breaking the law."

Larry Gonzalez, a US citizen who has hepatitis C, has known for a decade that he needs a new liver but was placed on the transplant waiting list only last week.

"Why do we have to get in line behind immigrants, foreigners, when we have enough people here to fill the hospitals?" said Gonzalez, 54, who lives in Ventura.

But Dr. Michael Shapiro, vice chairman of the ethics committee for the organ sharing network, said illegal immigrants have just as much right to receive organ transplants as US citizens. He said it is likely that more illegal immigrants donate organs than receive them. "People are people, and when you make an incision in an organ donor, you don't find little American flags planted on their organs," Shapiro said.

Illegal immigrant children with certain severe, chronic illnesses are eligible for funding under a state program. But the coverage ends when they turn 21.

State health officials said California law is designed so there is no gap in coverage, so children move seamlessly from state-funded treatment to county care. But that doesn't always happen. When they become adults, patients like Puente often must switch doctors and hospitals and might lose access to necessary medical care.

That break can be life-threatening. "It doesn't matter if I'm undocumented," Puente said. "They should take care of me at UCLA for the rest of my life because I've been there since I was a baby."

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 3.

#3. To: Jethro Tull (#0)

Am I missing something here?

What is causing this person to need four new livers by age twenty-two?

Lod  posted on  2008-04-21   8:47:37 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 3.

#4. To: lodwick (#3)

MD 20/20

noone222  posted on  2008-04-21 08:49:19 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: lodwick (#3)

It might be as simple as her not following post transplant care, ie; taking daily rejection meds.

Jethro Tull  posted on  2008-04-21 09:11:57 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#16. To: lodwick (#3)

What is causing this person to need four new livers by age twenty-two?

Complications hit about one-third of people who donate part of their livers for transplantation, raising questions about a surgery once viewed as the solution to a critical shortage of organs...

Live-donor liver transplants, which emerged in the early part of the decade as a way to stop people from dying on waiting lists, have come under scrutiny in recent months. At issue is whether perfectly healthy donors should be put at risk, regardless of their willingness to help a loved one.

News of the study, expected to be published in a scientific journal later this year, emerged after the abrupt resignation of Dr. Amadeo Marcos, UPMC's chief of transplantation since 2004. Marcos resigned five days before the Tribune-Review published the results of a four-month investigation showing that UPMC and other programs perform liver transplants when patients don't need them.

Across the nation, live-donor liver surgeries have dropped by almost half, to 267 last year from 522 in 2001, as surgeons learn more about donor complications that in extreme cases have been fatal.

Those include the 1999 death of Danny Boone at the University of North Carolina and the 2002 death of Mike Hurewitz at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York. Their widows are advocates for donors and say the transplant community is moving too slowly in its efforts to tell donors about potential risks.

"We were never told about the risks," said Rhonda Boone of Burnsville, N.C., whose husband donated part of his liver to his brother. "There is no true informed consent."

Rhonda Boone has spent nine years trying to ensure that transplant centers tell donors what to expect from a surgery they don't need but receive in order to help someone who is ill.

Her friend, Vickie Hurewitz of Albany, N.Y., whose husband of 12 years died after donating part of his liver to his brother, said donors deserve all the information they can get and there should be stricter selection criteria.

"They just want the organ, in my opinion," she said. "They're not concerned about the donor."

Tauzero  posted on  2008-04-21 14:08:13 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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