Texas hospital data shows millions spent in care for non-U.S. citizens
Posted/updated on: April 22, 2025 at 8:28 amAUSTIN – Preliminary data shows that âtens of thousandsâ of patients who were not âlawfullyâ in the United States were treated by Texas hospitals in recent months and the cost for their care is in the millions of dollars, according to a state employee testifying before lawmakers late Monday.
Gov. Greg Abbott ordered Texas hospitals last summer to begin asking all patients to disclose whether they were âlawfully in the United States.â Patients were told their answers would not jeopardize their access to health care but they were not legally required to answer.
Hospitals were expected to turn in their first months of data by March 1 but it has not been released publicly yet.
But during a House Public Health Committee hearing on a bill from state Rep. Mike Olcott, R-Fort Worth, that would formalize Abbottâs order into a regular annual report each year, a Texas Health and Human Services Commission executive answered lawmakersâ questions about what the agency has learned so far from the 558 Texas hospitals that have responded to Abbottâs order.
âThe number of visits was in the thousands, the tens of thousands, and the costs were in the millions,â said Victoria Grady, director of provider finance at HHSC, âWe should be finalizing the data by the end of the week.â
Several media outlets, including The Texas Tribune, have asked for the data following the hospitalsâ first March 1 deadline set by Abbottâs office. Grady and Olcott detailed why thereâs been such a delay in getting that first snapshot out into the public view.
âThey actually got some data on like pieces of paper,â Olcott told committee members. Grady confirmed that the agency has had to, on occasion, manually input data on paper that was mailed into the agency from some hospitals into a spreadsheet. She also said she expects the data to be released by the agency later this week.
Abbottâs order told hospitals to begin collecting information in November 2024. But itâs not clear if the data collected by the 558 hospitals was just for that month or all months since then.
Olcott said his bill, like one already passed in 2023 in Florida, is necessary because it would streamline the survey process and keep Texans informed about how their tax dollars were spent.
âSince 2005, weâve had 181 small rural hospitals close primarily due to uncompensated care,â Olcott said. âThe goal of this is simply to know what percentage of that uncompensated care are due to people here illegally.â
According to the Texas Hospital Association, hospitals in this state spend $3.1 billion a year on uninsured care that is not reimbursed. But a large portion of that is for American citizens who are uninsured in Texas. The state has one of the highest rates of uninsured residents in the nation, with more than 4 million without health insurance coverage.
Lynn Cowles, health and food justice programs manager at Every Texan, which advocates for better health care in Texas, testified on that fact.
âI think one of the big issues with this bill ââ if it is intended to understand the problems of rural hospitals closing across the state ââ is that the pool of uncompensated care is so large because of the amount of citizens who are uninsured in Texas,â Cowles said.
Article originally published by The Texas Tribune. To read the originally published article, click here.