Volunteer Doctors In El Paso Try To Care For Immigrant Patients On The Move

“These doctors only have a few days with the patients, so a lot of what they’re doing is trying to stabilize them.”

By Jill AmentApril 10, 2019 6:59 am, ,

As thousands of Central American migrants wait in Texas border cities for their immigration hearings, some of them are also awaiting health care services. But Anna Maria Barry-Jester, senior correspondent for Kaiser Health News, says there’s a network of volunteer doctors in El Paso who are struggling to provide care.

These doctors work at clinics in shelters where immigrants go after they’re released from detention. She says the doctors are seeing routine health issues like coughs, colds and diarrhea. But also, they’ve treated a man with MRSA, or methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, which she describes as a “flesh-eating” bacterial infection, and more.

“People with out-of-control diabetes because their medicines had been taken away in detention, kids with bronchitis and lots of wounds on feet from the long journey traveled,” Barry-Jester says.

Barry-Jester says kids with coughs and colds most likely contracted viruses from their time in detention – from being kept in an enclosed space. But she says there’s little evidence of more severe communicable diseases like tuberculosis.

The doctors are all volunteers for the nonprofit Annunciation House, which runs the shelters out of old warehouses, motels, nursing homes and churches. Barry-Jester says many of them are pediatricians who work in the shelter clinics every day. Some of them had even volunteered to treat people at Immigration and Customs Enforcement facilities in years past.

Barry-Jester says the unofficial coordinator, Dr. Carlos Gutierrez, and the other doctors, fill in gaps where the federal government has fallen short. She says prior to the December deaths of two immigrant children in detention, the government didn’t provide routine medical care. That has changed, but Barry-Jester says what the government now provides sometimes isn’t adequate. For example, medical providers working with ICE apparently didn’t follow up after the blood test for one young girl who left detention with deep bruises.

“She had been released from detention without getting the results of those blood tests,” Barry-Jester says. “The [volunteer] doctor tried to go and get the results from the hospital; the hospital asked for a privacy waiver … and then by the time the doctor went back to get it from the mother, they had actually left on a bus for another state.”

Doing thorough medical work is hard because of the patients’ constantly changing circumstances. So Barry-Jester says the doctors mainly focus on short-term care.

“These doctors only have a few days with the patients, so a lot of what they’re doing is trying to stabilize them, make sure that they’re safe to travel, get any medications that they need, immediately, under control,” Barry-Jester says.

Written by Caroline Covington.

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