“Hoffman is not only one of this nation’s leading historians of medicine, but with Borders of Care she’s also proven to be a leading historian, period. She has bravely taken on our two most screwed up realms, the border and health care, and shown how intertwined they are. Every page features a telling story, an under-reported fact, a trenchant analysis.”
— Brian Alexander, author of “The Hospital: Life, Death, and Dollars in a Small American Town”
“In this deeply researched book, Hoffman chronicles the tangled histories of immigration and health care in the United States. She exposes a long-running conflict between our idealized values of universal care and the persistent fact of exclusionary policies. Through individual stories, collective campaigns, and analyses of larger structures of political economy, this history shows how the denial of basic rights has had immediate and mortal consequences. Hoffman also shows how people have organized in the face of tremendous opposition to make decent medical care a reality. This affecting and incisive work is essential reading for scholars, advocates, and policymakers.”
— Luke Messac, author of “Your Money or Your Life: Debt Collection in American Medicine”
“Borders of Care presents a sweeping and wide-ranging history of migrants’ treatment in the American healthcare system. Hoffman’s vivid and engaging narratives offer fresh insights into migrants’ varied experiences of inclusion and exclusion, as well as how their activism helped establish new rights for all American residents. Timely and deeply illuminating, this book ultimately reminds us of the profound dysfunctions of America’s immigration and health care systems.”
— Cybelle Fox, author of “Three Worlds of Relief: Race, Immigration, and the American Welfare State from the Progressive Era to the New Deal”
“Borders of Care provides a twentieth-century history of medical access, as seen through the experiences and campaigns of migrant communities, their advocates, and their neighbors. By centering the century-long experience of immigrant communities, Borders of Care provides a guide to understanding the future of medical care in our multi-ethnic, transnationally connected United States. This is a model of inclusive, empathetic historical analysis.”
— John Mckiernan-Gonzalez, author of “Fevered Measures: Public Health and Race at the Texas-Mexico Border, 1848–1942”
“This complex, somber book about US health care exposes how foreign nationals provide the United States with many health workers, even when they have no official right to receive that care. Historian of medicine Beatrix Hoffman notes that the many politicians who portray foreign nationals as a burden on medical resources ignore the fact that ‘both the health care system and the immigration system are fundamentally broken.’ Of US nurses who died of COVID-19, 20–30% were Filipino Americans and Philippine migrants.”
— Nature
“A fascinating analysis of the American immigration and health care systems, asserting that both are broken and fail to meet immigrant needs for health care access or the needs of the US economy for a steady supply of immigrant labor. . . . Essential.”
— Choice
“Hoffman's wide-ranging study of the immigration and health care systems’ connected inequalities offers an important scholarly contribution on its own, and her analysis of immigrant and migrant responses to such restrictions and exclusions profoundly enhances the significance of this book. . . . Borders of Care is a critically important work for scholars interested in immigration and medical history.”
— Social History of Medicine
“A rich history of the struggle for medical care in the United States of not just migrant and immigrants but of the general United States population. . . . Borders of Care, with its impressively extensive bibliography, offers a methodically documented history of how immigration and healthcare access have been rhetorically linked in the United States. As Hoffman argues, by placing unwarranted blame on a vulnerable population, politicians managed to (and still continue to) obscure systemic flaws in how healthcare is delivered/accessed by American citizens. This book is a great reference for anyone interested in cultural studies, public health, rhetoric, and/or political science.”
— Society for US Intellectual History