Monday, October 14, 2019

Global Health at Home: Caring for Migrant Families on their U.S. Arrival


The American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) sponsors an annual Global Health Summit. This year’s conference, in Albuquerque, NM, was the largest so far. The conference started primarily as a venue for family physicians who volunteer their time abroad, providing health care and teaching in generally less developed countries. These were for both long (a year or more) or short trips, often sponsored by religious organizations. They also can include work done through government (eg, Peace Corps) or non-governmental but non-religious organizations (eg, Partners in Health, Doctors without Borders, Doctors for Global Health), but the religious root of much of this work is still apparent in the use of the term “mission trip” for most short-term such activities, especially involving medical students or residents. Overall, most such organizations, including those largely or partially sponsored by churches or religiously-affiliated organizations, no longer make religious proselytizing or efforts to “convert the natives” a significant part of these trips, and focus instead on health care and health system development (although there are certainly exceptions). Many of the leaders in this field are also involved in development of health systems in countries across the globe and in international health organizations and efforts including WONCA (the World Organization of Family Doctors), the World Health Organization (WHO) and its sub-groups such as the Pan-American Health Organization (PAHO), and The Network-Towards Unity for Health.


While such international work remains the mainstay of global health activity, there is also increasing interest in addressing needs in the US. To some degree, this reflects a long-standing discussion regarding the degree to which many doctors and students are more interested in going abroad on such trips than providing care to the needy at home. Of course, this need not be a contradiction, and many of the most active physicians in global health also spend the bulk of their time in the US working with underserved communities. But there are also those, including many students, who are attracted to such trips for other reasons. These include “medical tourism” – using the trip as an excuse for an exotic vacation, particularly if the place they are going is near beaches or mountains. They also include what might be called “medical opportunism”, where students go because they will get to do things to people on these trips that would be forbidden for them to do in the US, especially procedures. On the positive side, they can, provided the physicians or students are open to it and do not just talk to each other and can go beyond the “we are here to help you” mentality, allow learning and increase intercultural understanding, as well as increase knowledge of conditions that are more prevalent in the developing world. In addition, some of these conditions, as a result of the climate crisis and other factors, are moving north into our own country, so we see Chikungunya and dengue and other formerly tropical diseases. The key distinction is in how these trips are approached; they should be of benefit to you, but are not, ultimately, about you, but about collaboration with people, and health care providers, in other countries.


One increasing area of interest that tends to bridge this US/international divide involves the care of migrants coming to the US, an issue that has becoming increasingly front and center over the last few years. While the care is done in the US, the people are coming from other countries; in the case of our southern border primarily Central America and Mexico, but people come from all over the world. Several presentations at the Global Health Summit addressed different aspects of “Border Health”, each of which is important and each of which creates the need for linkages with other aspects of the health system. One is the care of people who permanently live along the US/Mexico border. The border, of course, is artificial, and many families live on both sides including Native Americans, such as the Tohono O’odham of Arizona, whose reservation crosses the border. This is a special case of care for the poor and underserved. Another is the care of people who are migrant workers, who may “live” in the border area for much of the year, but move to other regions of the US to follow the harvest. This creates the need for linkages with migrant health providers across the country. A third is the care of just-arrived migrant families who present at our southern border and may spend just a few days in our border communities before moving on to other parts of the US where they have sponsors. This creates the need for communication with appropriate health facilities in those areas, both for general health care and “warm hand offs” for individuals with particular needs. Such needs include those with ongoing chronic diseases often made worse by the journey, acute but severe issues such as injuries (including traumatic amputation by trains) and acute renal failure from dehydration crossing the desert, pregnancies (especially those that are high risk), and newborn but small or premature infants, etc.


“Global Health at Home: Caring for Migrant Families on their U.S. Arrival” was the title of a presentation by three Tucsonans who volunteer at the Casa Alitas migrant shelter, Anna Landau, MD MPH, Patricia J. Kelly, PhD MPH FNP, and myself. Originally accepted as a seminar, it was “upgraded” to a plenary presentation when the originally scheduled Ostegaard Speaker, Michael Kidd of Australia, was unable to attend due to family issues. While it was an honor to be selected, it was also gratifying to note the level of interest among the participants, from those doing similar work in cities on the border such as San Diego, El Paso, and Yuma, AZ, to those across the US who see these people as patients in their home communities, from big US cities to small towns in SW Georgia.


I have attached the slides in 'Links to Documents', found on the right side of the blog screen. It is important to recognize that medical care, which given the fact that guests are usually present for only 1-3 days, follows a public health model of dealing with acute needs and screening for infectious disease, is only a small part of the Casa Alitas operation. Hundreds of volunteers – and all are volunteers -- work on food preparation and service, contacting sponsors and arranging transportation, collecting and sorting and distributing clothing, doing laundry, driving guests to the bus station, and the multiple other needs that migrants have. I would also like to quote some parts of an email sent out by the Reverend Delle McCormick, a long-time leader in working with migrants in Tucson, after the recent move of Casa Alitas, which she has given general permission to share widely:

Every day is a triumph of small steps toward smoothly operating, warmly encouraging, just and loving spaces for our guests and volunteers. We have fallen for this new place and time. With each move we get more nimble, creative, and courageous in what we do together. Love shines here….Despite new draconian immigration policies at the border, we still have received 2484 men, women, and children at our new Casa Alitas Welcome Center shelter, making a total of 17,418 since October of 2018 when we stepped up our efforts to provide shelter for families seeking asylum.

Our volunteers still provide extra touches to encourage the human dignity and rights of every person who passes through our door. We hear and hold the most harrowing of stories: from 80+ year-old Sra. T. who stayed with us for a month because we couldn’t locate her sponsor, to the young man who had his toes burned off because he couldn’t pay for his release from kidnappers, to the woman who was shot in the head by her husband, to the daughter whose 68 year-old mother, who is blind, was detained, to the teenager kidnapped and prostituted and beaten by the local gang,  to the many, many others, each of whom has harrowing stories that drove them to leave everything behind to seek asylum.

If anyone is interested in learning more about the work in Tucson at Casa Alitas, in coming to volunteer, or in donating, more information is available at the website https://ccs-soaz.org. Donations can be made directly to CCS at  Support Migrant Aid - Tucson and through its GoFundMe page https://www.gofundme.com/casa-alitas-for-migrant-families.

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