The US healthcare system is in crisis. A Supreme Court ruling could make things worse
(NPR) Amid the flurry of consequential Supreme Court decisions that have come down recently, it's the one about Temporary Protected Status that has America's health care sector the most worried.
The ruling last week cleared the way for the Trump administration to cancel TPS for Haitians and Syrians. Experts say deporting Haitian TPS recipients will have a catastrophic impact on the nationwide health care workforce crisis a workforce that is hugely dependent on immigrant labor.
The pain will be felt across hospitals and emergency rooms, which already operate under persistent staffing shortfalls, but it's the long-term care sector, including senior care facilities and home care, that will suffer the greatest disruptions, said Steffie Woolhandler, a distinguished professor of health policy at City University of New York at Hunter College and a faculty member at Harvard Medical School.
"It's going to be a disaster in the Boston area, where a lot of our nursing home and home care aides are Haitian," Woolhandler told NPR. But beyond that, she added, "If the United States becomes inhospitable to noncitizens, which I think Trump is doing, we're going to have a lot of problems staffing our entire healthcare system."
https://www.npr.org/2026/07/02/nx-s1-5878415/haitian-tps-healthcare-immigration-supreme-court
gab13by13
(33,107 posts)Wait until the 1st of the year when healthcare gets gutted by Krasnov's Big Ugly Death Bill.
Lonestarblue
(13,667 posts)The concern of the MAGA cabal on the Court is mostly how to empower Trump. That any justice dissented on the birthright citizenship case is a disgrace.
mopinko
(74,270 posts)if the system collapses, no 1 will b spared.
The Wizard
(13,962 posts)But it ranks below the rest of civilization.