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HEALTH IN NEW YORK New York City Health and Hospitals Vows to Keep Patient Immigrant Status Confidential By Ana Marengo
Last week,
New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation (HHC)
President Alan Aviles is announcing a campaign to promote HHC's policy
to protect immigrant privacy and confidentiality at a press event. His
open letter to immigrant New Yorkers promises privacy and respect. The
campaign featured that letter from Aviles and Linares stressing
every patient’s right to health care privacy and the public hospitals’
commitment to serve all New Yorkers and keep immigrant status
completely confidential. The open letter, which is available in
English, Spanish, Russian, Chinese, Korean, French Creole, Urdu,
Bengali and Albanian, promises to honor immigrants’ right to privacy,
reaffirms HHC’s policy against disclosing patient information and
urges immigrants to visit public hospitals. “Our doctors, nurses and
other health care workers care about you. They speak many languages.
Many of them are immigrants or children of immigrants. They all want
to serve you with respect,” states the letter from Aviles and Linares.
“Our City has 2.9 million foreign-born persons and an undocumented
population estimated at 500,000,” said Immigrant Affairs Commissioner
Guillermo Linares. “I am pleased to work with HHC on a citywide
effort to reach these New Yorkers. Our priority is to build and
maintain the confidence of the hundreds of thousands of immigrants who
continue to sustain our workforce, economy and communities.
Protecting our city means keeping all New Yorkers healthy.” The open
letter will be distributed widely to HHC patients and staff, immigrant
groups and community based organizations. HHC President Aviles also
announced that a number of city-wide ethnic and community newspapers
will publish the letter this week as a public service message. HHC’s
campaign to raise awareness about the public hospital services to
immigrants also includes a message from Aviles to 36,000 HHC employees
and a series of education sessions for front line staff who will
review hospital policy, immigrant laws and address patient needs. The
national debate about immigration has left many people confused,
that's why it is so important that HHC is reminding all immigrants
that using health care in New York is safe," said Adam Gurvitch,
Director of Health Advocacy at the New York Immigration Coalition, a
nonprofit organization that works with 150 groups throughout New York
State to protect and promote immigrants' rights. |
"The rest of the hospital industry
needs to follow HHC's lead, and do the right thing to reassure all
Americans that hospital workers do not share patients' personal,
confidential information, and in particular do not share immigration
status information with government agencies," said Gurvitch. The following ethnic community papers have committed to publishing the “Open Letter to Immigrant New Yorkers” as a public service message: El Diario-La Prensa, La Voz Hispana, the Bronx Times Reporter, Norwood News, and Greenline - The North Brooklyn Community News. HHC’s diverse patient population is 43% Latinos, 35 % black, 6% Asian, 6 % white and 10% are a wide mix of ethnicities. HHC also has a very diverse staff -- more than 80% represent communities of color - and many speak multiple languages. The New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation (HHC) is the largest municipal healthcare system in the country. HHC operates a network of 11 hospitals - Bellevue, Coney Island, Elmhurst, Harlem, Jacobi, Kings County, Lincoln, Metropolitan, North Central Bronx, Queens and Woodhull. The corporation also operates six diagnostic and treatment centers, four long-term care facilities, more than 80 community clinics and a home health care agency. HHC provides care to all regardless of ability to pay. HHC serves 1.3 million New Yorkers annually, including more than 450,000 who have no health insurance. HHC Options is a financial assistance program that ensures low and moderate-income HHC patients can get affordable healthcare. Through the program, HHC helps patients apply for public health insurance programs for which they may qualify. If a patient is not eligible for public insurance, we reduce the patient's fee to an affordable amount, based on family size and income. Every HHC patient whose family income is below 400% of the federal poverty level - without regard to immigration status - is eligible for some kind of financial assistance. Of course, all information related to any patient's immigration status is strictly confidential. |