Via an email from a reader - whoa! Talk about timely, with possible major implications likely to see appeals either way (link to story). A hospital deports an illegal immigrant with a brain injury needing extended, if not lifetime care at a major cost to the hospital. And no one else wanted him. This really only has two practical outcomes. They can do it without being liable, or we the taxpayers will be, one way or the other. This case is being and will continue to be watched, I'm sure.
STUART, Fla. (July 23) - The case against a South Florida hospital that quietly chartered a plane and sent a seriously brain injured illegal immigrant back to Guatemala over the objections of his family and legal guardian was in the hands of a jury Thursday.
Health care and immigration experts across the country are closely watching the court action. Lawyers say it may be the first of its kind and underscores the dilemma facing hospitals with patients who require long-term care, are unable to pay and don't qualify for federal or state aid because of their immigration status.
Why should Martin Memorial Medical Center have to pay for a lifetime of care "for injuries we didn't even cause?" hospital attorney Scott Machaud asked the six-member jury during closing arguments of the month long trial. He said the hospital saved the life of 37-year-old Luis Jimenez and provided the uninsured man with $1.5 million worth of care, only to be unfairly hit with a lawsuit by his cousin, who's his guardian.
"Paging Alice in Wonderland, where up is down and down is up and no good deed goes unpunished," Machaud exclaimed.
However, under federal law, Martin Memorial was required to care for Jimenez until someone else would take him. Because of his immigration status, no one else would. But hospitals that receive Medicare reimbursements are required to provide emergency care to all patients and must provide an acceptable discharge plan once the patient is stabilized.
The lawsuit seeks nearly $1 million to cover the estimated lifetime costs of his care in Guatemala, as well as damages for the hospital's alleged "false imprisonment" and punitive damages to discourage other medical centers from taking similar action.


I guess the best thing to do would be to just close the hospital.
Posted by: xerocky | Friday, July 24, 2009 at 08:11 AM
This is exactly why illegal immigrants should not be here, should be deported on discovery, and stop feeding on our social services and health care. We simply cannot take care of the whole world!
Posted by: Pat | Sunday, July 26, 2009 at 06:35 PM
Pat, will agree with not being able to care for the entire world, on this article, Jimenez's government did the right thing to accept him back into his country, they should also provide some sort of health care for him. The 'discharge plan' is where this hospital screwed themselves.
Posted by: flo | Monday, July 27, 2009 at 03:07 PM
However, under federal law, Martin Memorial was required to care for Jimenez until someone else would take him.
Posted by: Online Pharmacy | Thursday, August 13, 2009 at 12:03 PM