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Sept. 5, 2008

Rabbi Abraham J. Twerski: What does 'doing the right thing' entail?

Caroline B. Glick: The master strategist

Sept. 4, 2008

Ron Kampeas: Biden, Palin take lead in clash on Mideast issues

Bruce Dancis: With humor as their weapon, the Three Stooges took on Hitler

Sept. 3, 2008

Rabbi S. Binyomin Ginsberg: Productive school years don't just happen

The Kosher Gourmet by Linda Gassenheimer: Quick lamb stew serves up flavors of India

Sept. 2, 2008

The Jewish Ethicist by Rabbi Dr. Asher Meir: Costly Advice

Caroline B. Glick: Calling Israel's bluff

JWisdom: Wandering in Wonder by Rabbi Mordechai Becher

August 29, 2008

Rabbi Berel Wein: 20/20 sightlessness

Caroline B. Glick: When history is not repeated

JWisdom: Blessed or Cursed: It's Really Up to You by Rabbi Sroy Levitansky

August 28, 2008

Steve Lipman: A Comeback for the 'Jewish Jordan'

Jeffrey Weiss: Researcher reports 'intriguing' diabetes breakthrough

August 27, 2008

Rabbi Zecharya Greenwald: Removing the perfectionist's mask

The Kosher Gourmet by Emily Nunn: Summer harvest linguine

JWisdom:: The Missing Link in Spiritual Life by Rabbi David Aaron

August 26, 2008

Yaffa Ganz: Grandma gets lessons in staying cool

Frank J. Gaffney, Jr.: The Dems' 'soft' jihadist

JWisdom:: Today: Holocaust in the Perspective of Faith by Rabbi Nosson Scherman: Plague of indifference

August 25, 2008

The Jewish Ethicist by Rabbi Dr. Asher Meir: Q: A friend is bearing a silly grudge from a supposed wrong. What recourse do I have?

Daniel Pipes: Barack Obama through Muslim Eyes

JWisdom:: The knowledge you need to overcome your insecurities by Malka Schulman

August 22, 2008

Rabbi Berel Wein: Life's essential ingredient

Caroline B. Glick: Dominos anyone?

JWisdom:: Actually, Do Sweat the Small Stuff! by Rabbi Sroy Levitansky

August 21, 2008

Today in Biblical History by Rabbi Yonason Goldson: Popularization of Kabbalah: 20 Menachem-Av 1558 CE

Jonathan Rosenblum: Lessons from the Beyond

JWisdom: : The Olympian within is rooting for you -- yes, you! –- to go for the gold

August 20, 2008

Jonathan Tobin: Misleading Platform Platitudes

The Kosher Gourmet by Linda Gassenheimer: Chicken Salad with Asian Dressing

JWisdom: The Holocaust in the Perspective of Faith: America's Defense of the Jews --- Until WWII by Rabbi Nosson Scherman

August 19, 2008

Dennis Prager: If the Almighty doesn't exist

Frank J. Gaffney, Jr.: Obama's Islamist problem has nothing to do with his upbringing

JWisdom: Think your life is messed up? by Rabbi David Aaron

August 18, 2008

The Jewish Ethicist by Rabbi Dr. Asher Meir: Business with Friends

Diana West: Roars About Russia, Bare Whispers About Islam

JWisdom: Relationship agony: The real cause by Malka Schulman

August 15, 2008

Rabbi Abraham J. Twerski: To love the Divine

Caroline B. Glick: Georgia, Israel, and the nature of man

JWisdom: The Truly Righteous Don't Demand Entitlements by Rabbi Sroy Levitansky

August 14, 2008

Rabbi Yonason Goldson: Confessions of broken spirit

Libby Lazewnik: The Numbers Game

JWisdom: Six Questions You'll Be Asked in Heaven? - Uh - Let's Just Take One for Now! by Gavriel Aryeh Sanders

August 13, 2008

Jonathan Tobin: Georgia should be on their minds

The Kosher Gourmet by Linda Gassenheimer: Go Greek: Pair flavorful lamb kebabs with a hearty salad

JWisdom: Human hybrids aren't science fiction by Rabbi David Aaron

August 12, 2008

Rabbi Avi Shafran: Bless us

Daniel Pipes: The West's Islamist Infiltrators

JWisdom: From Sadness to Gladness: The Route from Tisha b'Av to Rosh Hashana by Rabbi Mordechai Becher

August 11, 2008

The Jewish Ethicist by Rabbi Dr. Asher Meir: A Jewish view on fair pricing

Caroline B. Glick: Ignoring failure in Gaza

JWisdom: 'Communication' Is Not The Answer! by Malka Schulman

August 7, 2008

Rabbi David Gutterman: A Continuing Story With a Sustaining Goal

Rabbi Berel Wein: Mourning and morning

JWisdom: Yes, we are still in exile by Rabbi Sroy Levitansky

August 6, 2008

David Ashenfelter: Government made military engineer's life a living hell because of his faith, Defense Department report documents

Jonathan Tobin: Speak the Truth; Defeat the Lies

JWisdom: Jewish Spirituality: Fusion or Confusion? by Rabbi David Aaron

August 5, 2008

Chris Leppek: Church/state wall beginning to crumble?

Paul Greenberg: Exit Olmert (no encore, please)

JWisdom: Serenity: Make the commitment by Rabbi Zelig Pliskin (Read by Gavriel Sanders)

August 4, 2008

The Jewish Ethicist by Rabbi Dr. Asher Meir: Am I taking advantage of another's psychological quirk?

Andrew Silow-Carroll: A black and a Jew walk into the White House…

JWisdom: The Holocaust in the Perspective of Faith: Edward R. Morrow visits the ‘living dead’ by Rabbi Nosson Scherman

March 22, 2007

J-Rhythms with Avraham Rosenblum: JWR's cutting-edge music program showcasing performers -- singers, song writers, musicians, and bands -- who learn and live the Torah lifestyle (OUR NEWEST IGODCAST !)

Oct. 29, 2003
Mortimer B. Zuckerman: Graffiti On History's Walls (MUST-READ!)

Jewish World Review

When uninsured aliens are hurt, who pays?

By Alan Bavley


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http://www.JewishWorldReview.com | (KRT) A car wreck in November put Caesar Sacaries-Barrios, 23, in a coma. He has been recuperating at Alpine North nursing home. Sacaries-Barrios, who is an undocumented immigrant, has no health insurance.

Sacaries-Barrios is lucky to be alive - and to still be in the United States.

The restaurant worker is an undocumented immigrant originally from Guatemala. He barely remembers the wreck that left him in a coma at North Kansas City Hospital.

He knows nothing about the estimated $250,000 the hospital has spent to keep him alive.

He's still unaware that the hospital - faced with the possibility of rapidly mounting bills - tried to fly him to his home country in a specially equipped plane while he was comatose.

"That shows you just how expensive this guy's care is," said Chuck Chionuma, a Kansas City lawyer who has been fighting a legal battle to keep Sacaries-Barrios in the United States. "They were willing to foot that bill just to get him back to Guatemala."

Shipping a patient home may be an extreme measure. But it's a sign of the frustration at many hospitals across the country as they care for growing numbers of poor, undocumented immigrants.

The immigrants often work at low-paying jobs that do not provide health insurance. They often do not qualify for government health programs, such as Medicaid, or are too fearful to apply.

Christina Vasquez Case, director of Alianzas, a University of Missouri-Kansas City initiative that works with the Hispanic community, said she understood how unpaid medical bills could frustrate communities but said the American labor market had a role in creating the situation.

Undocumented workers "get here, and within 36 hours of being here, the people who want to work, can work," Case said. "That is the reality of it."

When undocumented immigrants show up at emergency rooms in critical condition, hospitals are ethically and legally bound to treat them.

"It does seem to be a problem of growing dimensions," said Carla Luggiero, who handles immigration concerns for the American Hospital Association. "At some point, our nation is going to have to grapple with the issue."

Officials at North Kansas City Hospital declined repeated requests to discuss its care of Sacaries-Barrios but issued this statement: "We are glad that Mr. Barrios is recovering from his injuries, and we wish him well as he continues to progress during his recovery. At this time, we feel it's best not to provide any further comment."

The cost of caring for undocumented immigrants is impossible to calculate nationally because hospitals rarely track patients' immigration status.

But when the Florida Hospital Association polled its member hospitals in 2002, it received 700 reports of uninsured non-citizens who ran up bills totaling more than $40 million for childbirth, brain tumors, heart surgery and other care.

In counties that border Mexico, hospitals and ambulance services estimated that they spent more than $200 million in 2000 caring for undocumented immigrants who were uninsured.

The problem is reaching deep into the heartland as well.

Luggiero said she regularly gets calls from states with growing immigrant populations, such as New York, New Jersey, Illinois, North and South Carolina and Kansas.

Immigrants have been streaming into southwest Kansas for years, attracted by jobs in the region's meatpacking plants.

In Dodge City, Kansas, 30 percent to 40 percent of patients arriving at the emergency room of the Western Plains Medical Complex are undocumented immigrants, said Brian Roland, the hospital's business office director.

"Most of them are uninsured," he said. "We do have some folks who do what they can to pay, but a large majority does not."

Truman Medical Center estimates it spends at least $500,000 a year providing dialysis for eight kidney patients, all undocumented or resident immigrants who do not qualify for public programs such as Medicaid.

Because the patients are uninsured, the hospital has been unable to find any outpatient dialysis clinics willing to care for them.

Rather than force the patients to wait until they are critically ill to receive dialysis at the emergency room, the hospital schedules them for visits three times a week.

"Several of the patients are young adults with families - young children they're responsible for who are U.S. citizens. How do you say no to them?" said Suzanne Meyer, Truman's director of social work.

Although Medicaid has provisions to pay for the emergency care of some immigrants, eligibility is just as limited as it is for other patients, said Anne Dunkelberg of the Center for Public Policy Priorities, a Texas-based advocacy group for people with low or moderate incomes.

"You have to look like a (regular) Medicaid recipient in every way except for your immigration status," she said.

When Congress approved a new Medicare drug benefit in 2003, it included $1 billion that will be paid out over the next four years for emergency care to undocumented patients.

Dunkelberg said that the program would pay only pennies on the dollar.

"It would be a little marginal bonus to hospitals," she said.

Most of the money will go to states with large numbers of immigrants, such as California and Texas. Kansas is scheduled to receive $1.1 million this year. Missouri would get $525,000. Sacaries-Barrios' care would absorb almost half that amount.

Sacaries-Barrios is recuperating at the nursing home. His lawyers say the hospital is paying his bills.

Through an interpreter, Sacaries-Barrios said he came to the United States about two years ago from Mexico. He worked as a restaurant cook and dishwasher, sending money back to his family.

The night of Nov. 17, Sacaries-Barrios was riding in a car with a friend. He remembers the car turning over, and he remembers feeling blood.

According to court documents, doctors diagnosed Sacaries-Barrios as comatose and suffering head injuries and a ruptured spleen. They placed him on a ventilator to assist his breathing and fed him through a tube.

When the hospital transferred Sacaries-Barrios to Alpine North on Dec. 23, his condition had stabilized, but he was in a persistent vegetative state, incapable of conscious thought or behavior.

A month later, a hospital physician said that his condition had not changed and that his long-term prognosis was poor, court records said.

As the hospital worked to identify Sacaries-Barrios and look for family members, word of his case reached Spanish-language radio station La Super X, 1250 AM.

Rosa Quintana, an account executive with La Super X, said hospital officials told her they intended to send Sacaries-Barrios to Guatemala.

Although Guatemala has public hospitals open to the poor, they do not provide the same care as U.S. hospitals, said Gustavo Lopez, the Guatemalan consul general in Chicago, who is familiar with Sacaries-Barrios' situation.

"He wouldn't have the same assistance," Lopez said. "That's the plain truth."

Quintana contacted Chionuma, who is an immigrant from Nigeria. He agreed to represent Sacaries-Barrios free of charge.

Chionuma said he met with hospital officials Jan. 26 and pleaded with them to let Sacaries-Barrios stay in the United States. Hospital officials told him they were going ahead with their plan, he said.

Chionuma began legal proceedings in Clay County Circuit Court to prevent North Kansas City Hospital from moving Sacaries-Barrios. By mid-February, the hospital sent word to Chionuma through its attorneys that it had no intention of returning Sacaries-Barrios to Guatemala.

The federal Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act requires hospitals to screen, treat and stabilize anyone who arrives at an emergency room, regardless of income or immigration status.

"It sounds to me that (North Kansas City) hospital at least met its stabilization requirements (with Sacaries-Barrios)," said Steve Hitov of the National Health Law Program in Washington.

"The real question now is: Where does he go? You can't discharge a person into the same danger or worse danger than they were in before."

In 2003 a Florida hospital flew a patient home to Guatemala after he had run up bills of more than $1 million. The man had come out of a coma but was severely brain damaged. A court later ruled that the hospital did not have a good plan for his continued care and should not have discharged him.

It is exceedingly rare for hospitals to avoid giving legally required care to undocumented patients, said Gabrielle Lessard of the National Immigration Law Center in Los Angeles.

"I think health-care providers try to do the right thing for patients," she said.

Many undocumented immigrants still stay away from hospitals or fail to apply for government programs because they are afraid their immigration status will be reported, Lessard said.

"These are people who try not to use health services," she said. "They only go to the hospital if there's no alternative."

Sacaries-Barrios is making a remarkable recovery. By early February, he appeared to be regaining consciousness. By the end of the month he was out of bed and talking. He's thinking of returning home.

"The man is coming back to life," Chionuma said.

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© 2005, The Kansas City Star. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services

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