About | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline

20 Yale J. Health Pol'y L. & Ethics 1 (2021)

handle is hein.journals/yjhple20 and id is 1 raw text is: Health Care Sanctuaries

Medha D. Makhlour
Abstract:
It is increasingly common for noncitizens living in the United States to avoid
seeing a doctor or enrolling in publicly funded health programs because they fear
surveillance by immigration authorities. This is the consequence of a decades-long
shift in the locus of immigration enforcement activities from the border to the
interior, as well as a recent period of heightened immigration enforcement. These
fears persist because the law incompletely constrains immigration surveillance in
health care.
This Article argues that immigration surveillance in health care is a poor
choice of resource allocation for immigration enforcement because it has severe
consequences for health and the health care system; additionally, it compromises
the legitimacy of the state vis-i-vis its noncitizen residents. The consequences
include public health threats, health care system inefficiency, ethical dilemmas,
and increased vulnerability in immigrant communities. Laws permitting
immigration surveillance in health care also create legitimacy harms by obstructing
noncitizens' access to health care and undermining their privacy and rights to
public benefits. The COVID-19 pandemic starkly illustrates these dangers, but
they exist even in the absence of a novel disease outbreak.
Health care access for noncitizens has largely been left to the vagaries of
immigration policy. Immigration surveillance in health care should prompt us to
consider the scope and limits of health law and the role of discretion in immigration
law. Health care sanctuaries-durable legal protections against immigration
surveillance in health care-recover some of the lost equilibrium between
immigration enforcement and other goals and values of public policy.
* Assistant Professor and Director, Medical-Legal Partnership Clinic, Penn State Dickinson Law;
Assistant Professor, Department of Public Health Sciences, Penn State College of Medicine. I am
grateful for helpful feedback from Eisha Jain, Ji Seon Song, Sidney Watson, and participants in the
Privacy Law Scholars Conference, the AALS Virtual Health Law Workshop, and the New York
University Clinical Law Review Writers' Workshop. Thank you to Christian Sweger for excellent
research assistance. Thank you to my colleagues in the Penn State Dickinson Law Katz Workshop
and to my family for their support and encouragement.

1

What Is HeinOnline?

HeinOnline is a subscription-based resource containing thousands of academic and legal journals from inception; complete coverage of government documents such as U.S. Statutes at Large, U.S. Code, Federal Register, Code of Federal Regulations, U.S. Reports, and much more. Documents are image-based, fully searchable PDFs with the authority of print combined with the accessibility of a user-friendly and powerful database. For more information, request a quote or trial for your organization below.



Short-term subscription options include 24 hours, 48 hours, or 1 week to HeinOnline.

Contact us for annual subscription options:

Already a HeinOnline Subscriber?

profiles profiles most