Beyond Treatment:

Project Access and Social Determinants of Health

By Kathryn Keaton

IN 1885, ELEVEN YOUNG NUNS WITH LITTLE TO NO medical experience arrived in “bawdy” Fort Worth via horse-drawn carriage. Their charge was to staff the Missouri Pacific Infirmary. While their initial task was to tend to injured and ill railroad workers, by 1889, The Incarnate Word Order had purchased land and built a hospital that became known as St. Joseph Infirmary.1 In 1923, after a boy died from lack of medical treatment at a different local hospital, Mother Superior proclaimed that both those with means and without would have equal treatment at St. Joseph – including Black patients – when many other hospitals did not.2 During the Depression, Fort Worthians lined up for food distributed by the nuns. Renamed St. Joseph Hospital in 1966, the sisters continued staffing St. Joseph Hospital, working alongside Fort Worthʼs physicians, many of whom still have core memories of the sisters and the care provided until its closure in 2004.3

These sisters never heard the term “Social Determinants of Health,” but in Fort Worth, the nuns were pioneers of the practice. The Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion defines Social Determinants of Health (SDOH) as “the conditions in the environments where people are born, live, learn, work, play, worship, and age that affect a wide range of health, functioning, and quality of-life outcomes and risks.”4 The World Health Organizationʼs more simple definition is “non-medical factors that influence health outcomes.”5 These issues vary greatly and are different for every community and individual,
but they each fall into one of five categories: economic stability, education access and quality, healthcare access and quality, neighborhood and environment, and social and community context.6

There is no one list of what these categories include, but the factors account for 50 to 70 percent of all health outcomes.7 The Nova Institute for Health of People Places and Planet claims that “A personʼs health . . . is determined far more by their zip code than by genetics or their family history.”8 This fact is sobering considering that Fort Worthʼs 76104, home of the Hospital District,
has the lowest life expectancy in the state, first reported by UT Southwestern in 2019.9

Equitable access to timely healthcare is certainly among the SDOH that Project Access Tarrant County addresses, but since the beginning, PATC has striven to go much deeper than only access to specialty and surgical care.

The two factors most impacting SDOH for many low-income, uninsured Tarrant County patients are healthcare access and financial stability. These are inextricably linked, particularly for noncitizens who rely on their health to maintain employment and upon their continued employment for their health. Even among American citizens, the uninsured percentage of the Tarrant County (and all of Texas) population is 20 percent, double the national average; however, the percentage among Tarrant County Hispanics or Latinos is over 28.10

Healthcare access, the primary SDOH that PATC addresses, has a direct link to financial stability, especially when our intervention leads to continued or regained employment. In addition, PATC strives to identify other social determinants our patients face and address and/or refer to the best of our ability.

Primary Care
In addition to the growing number of JPS neighborhood clinics, Tarrant County is home to a vital network of free, low-cost, or sliding scale clinics that provide essential primary care to the underinsured or uninsured population. These clinics are geographically scattered across the county, including locations in Fort Worth, Arlington, Mansfield, Grapevine, Crowley, and others. Most of these are community- or church-based clinics, but Tarrant County is also home to one federally qualified health clinic (with three locations) and an optometry clinic that is based on a sliding scale model but also takes private insurance.


While most PATC referrals come from these clinics (including JPS), we also receive referrals from our volunteer physicians, emergency departments, and
the general public. The patients that come from places other than a primary care setting are more likely to have untreated (and sometimes undiagnosed) medical conditions. At least 28 percent of all active and pending PATC patients have diabetes and/or hypertension. Among Tarrant County Hispanics and Latinos, who comprise about 90 percent of all PATC patients, heart disease is the second leading cause of death, followed by diabetes at number six. In 2020, 30 percent of adults whose annual income was below $50,000 had not had a routine check-up in the past year. Because they lack basic primary care, they may not understand the importance of preventative medical care, or they may have other SDOH barriers. Others are simply unaware of what resources are
available to them.

“Ray” recently met with PATC Case Manager Karla Aguilar. Referred by a PATC volunteer ophthalmologist who specializes in retina diseases, Ray has severe diabetic retinopathy requiring surgery. He told Karla he could barely see to work and relied on his wife to drive him everywhere. While simultaneously working on the paperwork needed for Rayʼs enrollment and surgery, Karla asked about the primary care Ray has been receiving. The answer was “none.” She helped him choose from PATCʼs partner clinics and made a direct referral. She seized the opportunity to educate him on the importance of primary care,
especially with a chronic disease like diabetes. Ray seemed unaware that untreated diabetes can lead to serious health conditions, including a recurrence of his retina disease. Further into the discussion, Karla discovered that Rayʼs wife and their children, ages 12 and seven, were also without a primary care home. PATC referred the patientʼs wife to the same clinic as Ray and, since their children are citizens, referred them to a social service agency that can help them apply for Medicaid.

Healthcare Literacy
Ray needed a primary care physician, but the underlying problem was not understanding its importance. Formal education isnʼt the only factor in understanding oneʼs own healthcare. Language, culture, and knowledge of resources also impact this SDOH. PATC caseworkers frequently educate patients on what many would consider common knowledge. They also empower patients to ask questions and understand their own health.

“Sandra” called former PATC Case Manager Diana Bonilla to complain about her PATC volunteer physician. “Heʼs not treating me correctly,” she vented. “I want a different doctor.” After some investigating, Diana learned that the patient was not asking any questions of the doctor (who, of note, is very well known in his field) – and the patient admitted that she felt that, as a charity patient, she did not have the “right” to ask questions about her own health. After a long conversation, Diana encouraged the patient to take written notes of what she didnʼt understand about her care and questions she had about her condition. After Sandraʼs next appointment with the same doctor, she called Diana back. She excitedly told Diana that her questions were patiently answered, she understood her diagnosis and the prescribed course of treatment, and she was thrilled to complete her care with this same physician. Healthcare literacy and patient empowerment likely prevented a patient from discontinuing her medical care. In this case, a delay of care would have had a devastating impact on her health and her familyʼs wellbeing.

Another PATC patient, “Enrique,” was enrolled in PATC for heart issues, but he also had a severe psychiatric diagnosis. His mother was his caregiver. She was often sad about her sonʼs mental health diagnoses, and, apparently as a coping mechanism, she told Diana that she had started sampling her sonʼs medication. “I want to see how it makes him feel.” Taking a deep breath (and quickly Googling), Diana explained to her that not only would his medication
not make her “feel” the same way as it made Enrique feel but was also very dangerous. She read off a list of possible outcomes of taking a medication that was not prescribed to her by her doctor.

PATC also provides practical solutions to common SDOH, such as interpretation and transportation barriers. The 2022 Tarrant County Public Health Community Health Assessment reports that almost 6 percent of all Tarrant households have limited English proficiency; however, among Spanish-speaking households, that number is over 20 percent. Many non-English-speaking patients have adult family or friends they prefer to take with them for interpretation, but PATC has provided interpreters for close to one thousand medical appointments. Spanish is the main language requested, but we have also received referrals for patients who speak Arabic, Burundi, Farsi, French, Hindi, Korean, Mandarin, Mandigo, Nepalese, Persian, Portuguese, Swahili, Tanghulu, Urdu, Vietnamese, and Wolof. We provide in-person interpreters whenever possible; however, for some less common languages, we employ a national phone-based service.

Transportation is another potential barrier to care, especially in Tarrant County, where most municipalities have no public transit. While Arlington does have a rideshare program, it is the largest city in the United States with no public transportation. The cities that do have mass transit are limited and they usually donʼt cross city lines. Fortunately, most PATC patients have access to transportation. PATC can provide private rides for the ones who do not.

Vulnerable Communities
Immigrants and people of color are among the most vulnerable communities in Tarrant County. Because the Tarrant County Commissionerʼs Court disallows
undocumented individuals from enrolling in JPS Connection,11 the countyʼs indigent program, existing SDOH barriers are exacerbated. PATC excludes those
enrolled in JPS Connection 11, so most of our patients are the undocumented, a segment PATC has dubbed the “never served” when it comes to specialty and surgical healthcare. Eighty-five percent of PATC patients are Hispanic who speak Spanish only. The remaining 15 percent are mostly undocumented patients of non-Hispanic origin. Covering racial inequality in the United States down to our own community would take years of Tarrant County Physician magazines, and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundationʼs report “What Can the Health Care Sector Do to Advance Health Equity?” gives an in-depth summary of the problems and roads to solutions for some of the factors.

One of the guiding principles of this report states,
Pursuing health equity entails striving to improve everyone’s health while focusing particularly on those with worse health and fewer resources to improve their health. Equity is not the same as equality; those with the greatest needs and least resources require more, not equal, effort and resources to equalize opportunities.12

Conclusion
Project Access excels at providing medical treatment, and this is, of course, why the program was created. We also enjoy showcasing the medical care provided. What we have not done as well is communicate the depth of services we offer to make sure that our patients not only have access to medical services, but that we also address the issues that have prevented the care in the first place. We are not a wide program, but we are deep. PATC will never be able to fix the global issues of inequality, poverty, and education; but we can (and do) address the issues facing our individual patients that impact their access to and understanding of their own care. Hopefully, they will possess more knowledge and tools for the next time they face a healthcare crisis.


References:

  1. Steve Martin, “Goodbye St. Joseph Hospital.” Tarrant County Physician, 90, no. 8 (August 2012): 8-9, 16.
  2. Regrettably, Black patients were confined to the St. Joseph basement, as were Black physicians. Riley Ransom, Sr., MD, opened the 20-bed Booker T. Washington Hospital, later known as the Fort Worth Negro Hospital and then the Ethel Ransom Memorial Hospital, in 1914. “1115 E. Terrell Ave: Tarrant County Black Historical & Genealogical Society,” TCBHGS, accessed March 2024, https://www.tarrantcountyblackhistory.org/1115-e-terrell-ave#:~:text=Booker%20T.,by%20the%20American%20 Medical%20Association.
  3. Texas State Historical Association, “St. Joseph Hospital,” Texas State Historical Association, accessed March 2024, https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/st-joseph-hospital.
  4. “Social Determinants of Health,” Social Determinants of Health – Healthy People 2030, accessed March 2024, https://health.gov/healthypeople/priority areas/social-determinants-health.
  5. “Social Determinants of Health,” World Health Organization, accessed March 2024, https://www.who.int/health-topics/social-determinants-of health#tab=tab_1.
  6. “Social Determinants of Health,” Social Determinants of Health – Healthy People 2030, accessed March 2024, https://health.gov/healthypeople/priority-areas/social-determinants-health.
  7. Karen Hacker et al., “Social Determinants of Health—an Approach Taken at CDC,” Journal of Public Health Management and Practice 28, no. 6 (September 8, 2022): 589–94, https://doi.org/10.1097/phh.0000000000001626.
  8. “Social Determinants,” Nova Institute for Health, April 14,2022, https://novainstituteforhealth.org/focus-areas/social-determinants/.
  9. “New Interactive Map First to Show Life Expectancy of Texans by ZIP Code, Race, and Gender,” UT Southwestern Medical Center, accessed March 2024, https://www.utsouthwestern.edu/newsroom/articles/year-2019/life-expectancy-texas-zipcode.html.
  10. “Tarrant, Texas,” County Health Rankings & Roadmaps, accessed March 2024, https://www.countyhealthrankings.org/health-data/texas/tarrant?year=2024.
  11. Alexis Allison, “Want a Say in How JPS Operates? Hereʼs How to Get Involved,” Fort Worth Report, February 18, 2023, https://fortworthreport.org/2023/02/18/want-a-say-in-how-jps-operates heres-how-to-get-involved/.
  12. “What Can the Health Care Sector Do to Advance Health Equity?” RWJF, accessed March 2024, https://www.rwjf.org/en/insights/our-research/2019/11/what-can-the-health-care-sector-do-to-advance-health-equity.html


PRESIDENT’S PARAGRAPH

How Much Does It Cost NOT to Provide Healthcare Services to the Undocumented?

by Stuart Pickell, MD, TCMS President

This article was originally published in the May/June issue of the Tarrant County Physician.

Note from the author: Although I have sourced much of the content in this article, some of the information comes from off-the-record conversations I have had with people who are or have been in leadership positions within the hospital district. In exchange for their honest assessment, I promised not to quote them.

I SUSPECT THAT, IF ASKED, THE average Tarrant County taxpayer would oppose spending tax dollars to fund healthcare for undocumented residents. I suspect also that they have at best a partial understanding of the issue borne out of media mischaracterizations and confirmation biases- on both ends of the political spectrum. Would that we could focus our attention on the information we need- as opposed to the information we want- when we make policy decisions that impact the community.

Harvard psychologist William James, in his presidential address to the American Philosophical Association, stated, “We are making use of only a small part of our possible mental and physical resources.”1 From this case the notion that we use only 10 percent of our brains, a myth so perpetuated by self-help books throughout the 20th century that by 2014, a survey revealed that roughly 50 percent of teachers around the world believed the myth to be true. 2 But James was not asserting that we use only a small part of our brain; he contended that we do not engage it fully. What he described is consistent with what we now know about attention and flow states. To solve problems, our brains work best when we focus our attention. This is also true for communities. If we want to address community concerns seriously, we must focus our attention not just to what we see on the surface, but on the currents that run underneath it. However, when it comes to healthcare and undocumented residents, you can’t finish the question before the knives come out and the war paint goes on. But this question is more nuanced than a soundbite debate regarding immigration. Let me provide some context and propose a path forward.

The County Health System

JPS is the “safety net” facility for those who “fall through the cracks” in our healthcare system. The county health system traces its origin to 1877 when the then-future mayor Jogn Peter Smith donated five acres of land south of town to provide medical care to city and county residents.3

The first public hospital opened in 1906. Associated with the Fort Worth Medical College, it was called the City-County Hospital and was free to all accident victims and others by agreement.4 In 1914, a new hospital was built across the alley from the medical college which, by this time, was affiliated with TCU. This building, at 4th and Jones, still stands and is now the Maddox-Muse Center. By the 1930s, the city had outgrown this facility and a new City-County Hospital was built on the land originally donated by John Peter Smith. In 1954, the hospital changed its name to honor the land donor.

Until the 1950s, faith-based healthcare institutions managed many of the hospitals and health networks in Texas. Fort Worth’s first hospital was St. Joseph (1885).5 The demand for reliable access to healthcare services for the indigent drove initiatives to create a taxing mechanism to improve healthcare resources in growing Texas communities. This resulted in a Texas state constitutional amendment in 1954 permitting the creation of county-wide hospital districts in counties with a population of at least 900,000 to better serve those communities. 6 Tarrant County formed its hospital district in 1959, centered around JPS. As needs increased, the facility grew, and in 2008, it acquired St. Joseph Hospital, which was torn down in 2012 to create space for ongoing expansion.

Because the hospital districts fall along county lines, they come under county jurisdiction and are overseen and managed by the county commissioners court. By statute, every Texas county must have a county judge and four county commissioners, each representing a district consisting of one-fourth of the county’s population. Every county, from Harris County’s 4.7 million residents to Loving County’s 83 residents, has four commissioners and a county judge. The commissioners courts are responsible for setting policy and determining budgets, many of which are dedicated to roads and bridges, law enforcement, and the hospital districts. 7,8 According to the Texas Health & Safety Code, the county must “provide health care assistance… to each of its eligible county residents.” 9 But who is “eligible”?

JPS has enjoyed excellent executive leadership, as evidenced by their ranking in Washington Monthly as the best teaching hospital in the county. 10 Yet while the executive team has significant authority to create a vision, establish priorities, and execute the network’s mission, it’s the Board of Managers- the JPS governing authority- that funds it and determines eligibility criteria. This board consists of representatives appointed to two-year terms by the commissioners court.

In 1996, Congress passed the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act deeming undocumented residents ineligible for many federal, state, and local public benefits, but it allowed states to expand benefits if they wanted to. 11 This created some uncertainty at the state level. In September 2003, a Texas law went into effect that deemed undocumented immigrants eligible for non-emergency care subsidized with local funds. According to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, the JPS Board of Managers interpreted this law to be a mandate and voted to allow undocumented immigrants to enroll in JPS Connection starting in January of 2004. 12 The following month, Senator Jane Nelson wrote a letter to then Attorney General Greg Abbott seeking clarification regarding the statute. 13 Five months later, the Attorney General rendered his opinion that the code “permits, but does not require, a hospital district to provide nonemergency public health services to undocumented persons who are otherwise ineligible for those benefits under federal law.”14 A few weeks later, the JPS Board of Managers rescinded their expansion policy, although those who had already enrolled were permitted to remain in the system.

Cracks in the System

Texas has the ignominious distinction of leading the nation in uninsured residents. At 18 percent, our uninsured rate is over twice the national average. 15 There are many factors, including Texas’ decision not to accept federal funding for Medicaid expansion (as of July, Texas will be one of only 11 states that has not accepted it) and a knowledge gap on the part of currently eligible people who don’t know how to enroll.16,17 But another driving factor is undocumented residents, the number of whom living in Texas is anyone’s guess.

Castigating immigrants, documented or not, as “the problem” obfuscates the bigger picture. We live in a transportation hub that provides ready access to much of the world. Immigration is considered a good thing. People come here because our expanding economy offers them jobs. Immigrants constitute 23 percent of the Texas workforce. A 2019 DFW survey revealed that immigrants made up 46 percent of our workforce in construction, 30 percent in manufacturing, and 26 percent in restaurant and food services. They contributed $119 billion to the Texas economy in personal income. Furthermore, 71 percent speak English, about 59 percent own homes, and 79 percent have lived in Texas for at least 10 years. 18 A recent national study focused on the experiences of undocumented immigrants revealed that immigrants typically pay more into the health system through taxes and premiums than they use in the form of healthcare services. 19 They do the same for the Social Security trust fund, something the Social Security Administration has known for years.20

And yet, at least in Tarrant County, undocumented immigrants struggle to access healthcare. they go to JPS at a discounted rate (typically 40-80 percent), but because of their legal status they often forego routine care even if they can swing a hammer of lift a beam or scrub a floor- they keep working for fear of losing their jobs. For the undocumented, the fear of discovery and deportation is real. They don’t just fall through the cracks; they hide in them. This works until a chronic problem becomes and urgent one, and they can no longer work and must seek care. With the average three-day hospitalization costing $30,000, the patient will still owe $6,000-$12,000 after discounts, which most cannot afford.21 Since they cannot enroll in federal programs, JPS will end out absorbing the cost.

JPS probably provides a lot of uncompensated care that we don’t know about. It would be illegal not to provide care in an urgent/emergent situations- not to mention unethical- so why don’t we focus our attention on the cost of NOT taking care of undocumented residents?

The fact is, no one wants to talk about this because its political kryptonite. State legislators say this is a county issue. The county commissioners say it’s the Board of Managers’ decision, but the Board of Managers is appointed by and serves at the pleasure of the county court. Everyone says it’s a federal issue, and yet when Medicaid expansion comes up the state turns it down. Geez.

I attended First Tuesdays at the capitol on March 6th, where I had the opportunity to sit down with the legislative aid for a Republican senator. When Medicaid expansion came up, she admitted, of the record, that Texas should accept it, but that this issue is a non-starter for her senator. Why? As Robert Frost put it,

Before I built a wall I’d ask to know what I was walling in, or walling out. 22

Likewise, before we say we’re not going to provide basic healthcare services, shouldn’t we want to know all the facts? The JPS Health Network’s report regarding healthcare planning for Tarrant county states that its critical for the system to “continue to shift the emphasis from hospital care- for medical and behavioral health issues- to ambulatory care to decrease the need for preventable and costly inpatient care.” 23 But our current policy creates a Gordian Knot in which a sizeable number of Tarrant County residents are forced to do the opposite. So, they wait until they can no longer work, at which point the problem may require a hospitalization and a more expensive “fix.”

A Proposal

What we need is to get past the political campaign slogans and focus our attention on the actual problem. Immigration reform is a valid concern and should be addressed, but it’s not the issue here. Our issue is local, and it impacts the people with whom. we live and work, and those we hire to work for us. The undocumented residents in Tarrant County aren’t leaving anytime soon. Furthermore, they contribute to the economy and pay taxes. What we need, then, is a task force to examine seriously and assess honestly all the issues that contribute to the problem. They should focus their attention not on the surface concerns that we find in a political campaign ad but on the underlying currents, the factors that make this problem more nuanced than can be contained in a soundbite. This task force should be apolitical by intention (to the extent that anything can be) and include people who care about the community, economic development, fiscal responsibility, and, of course, healthcare. TCMS is well positioned to help lead this initiative. We represent a variety of political viewpoints, but we share a common concern for taking care of our patients individually and collectively.

Factors this task force should consider include:

  • How Harris, Bexar, Dallas, and Travis Counties are managing this issue.
  • The number of people living in Tarrant County who are barred from county healthcare services.
  • The impact undocumented residents have on the community, including:
    • Their contribution to the economy
    • How much they pay in taxes
    • How much we are spending urgently treating preventable conditions.

Money is a finite commodity, so it, too, must be included in the conversation. Tax dollars should be spent wisely. County Judge Time O’Hare pledged to do this during his campaign, especially regarding the hospital district.24 He also promised to cut taxes, fund law enforcement, and eliminate waste, fraud, and abuse. 25 This alignment of priorities suggests that hospital district funding may be in peril.

But it doesn’t need to be. A serious study may reveal that we are “wasting money” by NOT providing these services, especially when we factor in the cost of uncompensated urgent and emergent care and the loss of worker productivity. We won’t know unless we ask. Furthermore, the surge in property values, and therefore property taxes, has afforded the state a $32.7 billion surplus. 26 Many constituencies are vying for that money- the taxpayers themselves, law enforcement, teachers- and all should be given serious consideration. But could we not give serious consideration also to addressing the healthcare needs of some of the most vulnerable individuals in our community by allowing undocumented residents to access the county healthcare network?

Once we know what we’re dealing with, we can begin to chart a course forward, riding the underlying currents rather than fighting them until we arrive at a destination that demonstrates hospitality, compassion, and fiscal responsibility. We may even find that the most fiscally responsible thing we could do is to offer basic primary care to these populations through a creative collaboration between JPS and other community resources. But we won’t know unless we ask.

References:

  1. James W. The Energies of Men. Science. 1907; (Vol. 25, No 635 (March 1, 1907)): 332-323.
  2. Howard-Jones PA. Neurosciences and education: myths and messages. Nature reviews Neuroscience. 2014; 15 (12):817-824. doi:10.1038/nrn3817
  3. History of JPS. Accessed March 25, 2023, https://www.jpshealthnet.org/about-jps/history
  4. Site of the Fort Worth Medical College. Historical Marker for the Fort Worth Medical College. https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=53215
  5. Park KB. St. Joseph Hospital. Texas State Historical Association. Accessed March 25, 2023, https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entris/st-joseph-hospital
  6. McKinley RD. Texas Hospital Districts: Past, Present, and Future. Affairs DoP; 2019. August 2019.
  7. What Is a County Commissioner? Texas Association of Counties. Accessed March 19, 2023. https://www.county.org/About-Texas-Counties/About-Texas-County-Officials/Texas-County-Commisioner
  8. What Does a County Commissioner Do in Texas? Texas Association of Counties. Accessed March 19, 2023. https://www.county.org/About-Texas-Counties/About-Texas-County-Officials/Texas-County-Commissioner
  9. Health and Safety Code, Texas State Legislature §61.022 (2023). https://statutes.capitol.texas.gov/ Docs/SDocs/HEALTHANDSAFETYCODE.pdf
  10. Editors T. Introducing the Best Hospitals for America. Washington Monthly 2020.
  11. Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996. 1996.
  12. Allison A. Local, state policies may contribute to higher cervical cancer death rate for Hispanic women in Tarrant County. Fort Worth Report. November 22, 2021. https://fortworthreport. org/2021/11/22/local-state-policies-may-contribute- to-higher-cervical-cancer-death-rate-for-hispanic- women-in-tarrant-county/
  13. Nelson J. Senator Jane Nelson to Attorney General Greg Abbott, February 4, 2004. In: Abbott AGG, editor. Letter from Senator Jane Nelson to Attorney General Greg Abbott seeking a clarifying opinion regarding the eligibility of undocumented residents for health care services under the Health and Safety Code Section 285.201 as added by Chapter 198, Acts of the 78th Legislature, Regular Session, 2003. ed 2004.
  14. Abbott G. Opinion No. GA-0219. 2004.
  15. Percentage of Population Without Health Insurance Coverage by State: 2019 and 2021. United States Census Bureau. Accessed March 25, 2023, https://www.census.gov/library/visualizations/ interactive/population-without-health-insurance- coverage-2019-and-2021.html
  16. Status of State Medicaid Expansion Decisions: Interactive Map. Kaiser Family Foundation. Updated February 16, 2023. Accessed March 25, 2023, https:// www.kff.org/medicaid/issue-brief/status-of-state- medicaid-expansion-decisions-interactive-map/
  17. Barton K. Tarrant County residents have access to free health care, but some say awareness is a barrier. Fort Worth Report. October 11, 2021. Accessed March 19, 2023. https://fortworthreport.org/2021/10/11/ tarrant-county-residents-have-access-to-free-health- care-but-some-say-awareness-is-a-barrier/
  18. Garcia Z. Immigrants are crucial to Texas’ economy. FWD.us. Updated February 23, 2022. Accessed March 19, 2023. https://www.fwd.us/news/ texas-immigrants/
  19. Ku L. Who Pays for Immigrants’ Health Care in the US? JAMA Netw Open. Nov 1 2022;5(11):e2241171. doi:10.1001/ jamanetworkopen.2022.41171
  20. Goss S, Wade A, Skirvin JP, Morris M, Bye KM, Huston D. Effects of Unauthorized Immigration on the Actuarial Status of the Social Security Trust Funds. Actuarial Note. April 2013. Accessed April 2, 2023. https://www.ssa.gov/oact/NOTES/pdf_notes/ note151.pdf
  21. Why health insurance is important: Protection from high medical costs. Accessed March 27, 2023, https://www.healthcare.gov/why-coverage-is- important/protection-from-high-medical-costs/
  22. Frost R. Mending Wall. North of Boston. 1914;
  23. Health Care Planning for Tarrant County and the Role of JPS Health Network. 2018. February 27, 2018. https://www.tarrantcountytx.gov/ content/dam/main/administration/JPS/CBRC%20 Report%20FINAL%20%202%2021%2018.pdf
  24. Allison A. Commissioners court elections could shift priorities of JPS Health Network during pandemic. Fort Worth Report. February 2, 2022.
  25. Judge Tim O’Hare website. https://www. electtimohare.com/
  26. Harper KB, Schumacher Y, Fort A. How could Texas spend its record $32.7 billion surplus? The Texas Tribune. March 13, 2023. Accessed March 27, 2023. https://www.texastribune.org/2023/03/13/ texas-budget-surplus/
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