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State Provided 2,000 Vaccines for Child Detainees

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In light of a recent surge of undocumented immigrants crossing the state’s southern border, the Texas Department of State Health Services has sent 2,000 state-purchased flu vaccines to a federal shelter housing unaccompanied minors in South Texas.

The agency approved the transfer of vaccines late last week for the BCFS International Children’s Shelter in Harlingen, officials said. The shelter, which has room for 290 children at a time, is one of 29 federal emergency shelters housing unaccompanied minors who have crossed the United States border into Texas. 

The vaccinations transfer comes at a time when state officials and medical professionals arevoicing public health concerns related to growing numbers of undocumented immigrants being held at the border. Officials with DSHS have identified several health-related issues at two temporary detention centers in South Texas, including a lack of testing for vaccinations.

After being held at the detention centers, unaccompanied minors who do not have family members already in the U.S. are transported to one of the emergency shelters, which are managed by the U.S. Health and Human Services’ Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR).

“This allowed unaccompanied children living in a crowded environment to be vaccinated more quickly than if the ORR contractor had waited for the arrival of federally purchased vaccine,” said Christine Mann, an agency spokeswoman.

With an unprecedented influx of 160,000 undocumented immigrants, including more than 33,500 unaccompanied minors — a number that is expected to grow substantially by the end of the year — some of the resettlement shelters have requested permission to add beds to accommodate everyone.

The resettlement shelters are eligible to participate in the Texas Vaccines for Children Program. Under federal law, all uninsured children under the age of 19 — regardless of citizenship status — can receive immunizations through the program. The federal government typically foots the bill for vaccines for unaccompanied minors, Mann said. The state opted to provide vaccines to the child detainees at its own expense, but it will be reimbursed.

“Our first priority was to ensure they got the vaccine, and we were willing to provide it,” Mann said. “Further discussions revealed the ability to get reimbursed so we’re going that route.”

Through the Vaccines for Children program, federal resettlement shelters in Texas have administered at least 59,882 vaccine doses to unaccompanied minors this year — 3,000 more vaccines than were administered in all of 2013.

The cost to the state for the vaccines recently approved for Harlingen is $26,000.

But Lucy Nashed, a spokeswoman for Gov. Rick Perry, said the cost is part of what the state is left to deal as a result of the “federal government’s failure” to secure the border.

“The public health issues stemming from this influx of illegal immigration are the most recent example,” she said. “The vaccines Texas is providing will be put to good use and will ultimately help protect the health of all Texans.”

Mann indicated that there are no plans for additional transfers of state-purchased vaccines to the resettlement shelters.

This story was produced in partnership with Kaiser Health News, an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonprofit, nonpartisan health policy research and communication organization not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.