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A Life Of Predictable Emergencies: Undocumented On Dialysis

For undocumented people in this country, like Margarita, a diagnosis of kidney failure can turn life into a series of predictable emergencies—with no end in sight.
Jake Harper/Side Effects
For undocumented people in this country, like Margarita, a diagnosis of kidney failure can turn life into a series of predictable emergencies—with no end in sight.

Margarita came to Indianapolis 13 years ago to help her sister, who had been diagnosed with brain cancer. After her sister died, Margarita stayed, but then a few years ago, she began having health problems of her own. When she went to the hospital, she was told that her kidneys didn’t work anymore.

There are an estimated 5,500 undocumented immigrants in the United States who have been diagnosed with kidney failure. The standard treatment for kidney failure is dialysis, a process that cleans the blood, every couple of days. For U.S. citizens, Medicare will pick up the bill, even if they’re not elderly. But for undocumented people in this country, a diagnosis of kidney failure can turn life into a series of predictable emergencies—with no end in sight.

This piece first aired on NPR's Latino USA Jake Harper can be reached at 317-614-0482 or  jharper@wfyi.org Follow him on Twitter:  @jkhrpr

Jake Harper was an investigative reporter for Side Effects Public Media, a Midwest health reporting collaboration based at WFYI. With Lauren Bavis, he co-hosts Sick, a podcast about what goes wrong in the places meant to keep us healthy.
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