Rationale: Approximately 150-250 migrants die each year while attempting to cross the border from Mexico to the Southwest United States. Many border crossers survive the journey, but some develop life-threatening medical complications. Such complications have been subject to little formal analysis.
Objectives: We sought to determine the causes of critical illness in this population and to analyze the hospital course and outcomes of these patients.
Methods: We retrospectively identified border crossers admitted to the intensive care units (ICUs) of two major teaching hospitals in southern Arizona. We recorded admitting diagnoses, severity of illness, length of stay, resource use, discharge diagnoses, and mortality.
Results: Our investigation identified 55 admissions to adult ICUs between January 1, 2010 and December 31, 2012. The median age of patients was 27 years. The median hospital length of stay was 7 days, with a median ICU length of stay of 3 days. The median temperature on arrival to the emergency department was 36.8°C. The most common admission diagnoses included trauma (40), rhabdomyolysis (27), acute liver injury (25), dehydration (24), acute kidney injury (19), and encephalopathy (17). Thirteen patients presented with respiratory failure, six patients with severe sepsis, and two with septic shock. A total of 19 patients required ventilator support during their hospital stay, and 30 required at least one surgical intervention. One patient required renal replacement therapy. The median Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II score was 6. All but one patient survived to discharge from the hospital.
Conclusions: Border crossers are a unique population of young individuals exposed to high temperatures and extreme conditions. Our review of border crosser admissions showed that most patients demonstrated signs of dehydration and leukocytosis, despite a normal median temperature. The median ICU stay was short, despite a high number of patients requiring ventilator support and surgical intervention. Only one death occurred in this cohort.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1513/AnnalsATS.201409-416BC | DOI Listing |
PLOS Glob Public Health
November 2024
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America.
Spat Spatiotemporal Epidemiol
August 2023
School of Landscape Architecture and Planning, The University of Arizona, Tucson AZ, USA.
Recent studies and reports suggest an increased mortality rate of undocumented border crossers (UBCs) in Arizona is the result of heat extremes and climatic change. Conversely, others have shown that deaths have occurred in cooler environments than in previous years. We hypothesized that human locomotion plays a greater role in heat-related mortality and that such events are not simply the result of exposure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Trauma Acute Care Surg
August 2023
From the Department of Surgery (B.A.K., R.C.I.), Division of Pediatric Surgery, Rady Children's Hospital, San Diego, California; Department of Surgery (J.S., A.S.), University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, Edinburg, Texas; Department of Trauma (J.S., M.B.-G.), DHR Health, Edinburg, Texas; Department of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery (J.S.R., J.A.R.), Brooke Army Medical Center, JBSA Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio, Texas; Department of Surgery (A.H.T.), Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, El Paso, Texas; Department of Surgery (C.P.L.), South Texas Health System, McAllen, Texas; Department of Surgery (B.J., C.S.), University of Arizona-Tucson, Tucson, Arizona; Department of Surgery (F.O.M.), John Peter Smith Health, Fort Worth, Texas; Department of Surgery (T.W.C., A.E.B.), Division of Trauma, Surgical Critical Care, Burns, and Acute Care Surgery, University of California San Diego, San Diego, California; Department of Surgery (J.S.P.), Division of Acute Care Surgery, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico; Department of Surgery (R.M.G.), University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, Harlingen, Texas; and Department of Surgery (R.C.), Riverside University Health System Medical Center, Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, California.
The US-Mexico border is the busiest land crossing in the world and faces continuously increasing numbers of undocumented border crossers. Significant barriers to crossing are present in many regions of the border, including walls, bridges, rivers, canals, and the desert, each with unique features that can cause traumatic injury. The number of patients injured attempting to cross the border is also increasing, but significant knowledge gaps regarding these injuries and their impacts remain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
October 2022
Department of Geology & Geophysics and Global Change & Sustainability Center, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, United States of America.
Unidentified human remains have historically been investigated nationally by law enforcement authorities. However, this approach is outdated in a globalized world with rapid transportation means, where humans easily move long distances across borders. Cross-border cooperation in solving cold-cases is rare due to political, administrative or technical challenges.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Health Care Poor Underserved
March 2022
Introduction: Increased enforcement at U.S.-Mexico border-crossing sites may lead migrants to cross in remote desert areas.
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