RIO GRANDE CITY, Texas â Jake Margo Jr. stood in the triage room at Starr County Memorial Hospital explaining why a person with persistent fever who could be treated with over-the-counter medication didnât need to be admitted to the emergency room.
âWeâre going to take care of the sickest patients first,â Margo, a family medicine physician, said.
Itâs not like there was space on that June afternoon anyway. A small monitor on the wall pulsed with the vitals of current patients, who filled the ER. An ambulance idled outside in the South Texas heat with a patient waiting for a bed to open up.
âEverybody shows up here,â Margo said. âWhen youâre overwhelmed and youâre overrun, thereâs only so much you can do.â
Starr County, a largely rural, Hispanic community on the southern U.S. border, when it voted Republican in a presidential election for the first time in more than a century. Immigration and the economy in this community, where roughly a third of the population falls below the poverty line.

Now, recent actions by the Trump administration and the GOP-controlled Congress have triggered a new concern: the inability of doctors, hospitals, and other health providers to continue to care for uninsured patients. Itâs a fear not only in Starr County, which has one of the highest uninsured rates in the nation. Communities across the U.S. with similarly high proportions of uninsured people could struggle as additional residents lose health coverage.
About 14 million fewer Americans are expected to have health insurance in a decade due to President Donald Trumpâs new tax-and-spending law, which Republicans dubbed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, and the pending expiration of enhanced subsidies that slashed the price of Affordable Care Act plans for millions of people. The new law also that send billions of dollars to help those who care for uninsured people stay afloat.
âYou can’t disinsure this many people and not have, in many communities, just a collapse of the health care system,â said Sara Rosenbaum, founding chair of the Department of Health Policy and Management at George Washington Universityâs Milken Institute School of Public Health.
âThe future is South Texas,â she said.
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News is examining the impact of national health care policy changes on uninsured people and their communities. Though the Trump administration told Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News it is making âa historic investment in rural health care,â people who treat low-income patients, as well as researchers and consumer advocates, say recent policy decisions will make it harder for people to stay healthy. Doctors, hospitals, and clinics that make up the health care safety net could lose so much money they must close their doors, some of them warn.
âBecause the patientâs bill is not going to get paid,â said Joseph Alpert, editor-in-chief of The American Journal of Medicine and a professor of medicine at the University of Arizona. âUninsured patients stress the health care system.â
Starr County shows how this dynamic unfolds.
Primary care doctors in the county serve an average of each, nearly three times the U.S. average.
Margo, the family physician, said because so many people lack insurance and there are so few places to seek care, many residents treat the ER as their first stop when theyâre sick.
In many cases, they have neglected their health, making them sicker and more expensive to treat. And requires ERs at hospitals in the Medicare program to stabilize or transfer patients, regardless of their ability to pay.
That leaves Margo and his team to practice what he described as âdisaster medicine.â
âThey come in with chest pain or they stop breathing. They collapse. Theyâve never seen a doctor,â Margo said. âTheyâre literally dying.â
Health Systems in âSurvival Modeâ
When people are uninsured or on Medicaid, they tend to rely on a safety net of doctors, hospitals, clinics, and community health centers, which offer services free of charge or absorb getting reimbursed at lower rates than they do treating patients on commercial insurance.
Those providersâ financial situations can often be precarious, leading them to rely on myriad federal supports. The Trump administrationâs cuts to health care and Medicaid in the name of eliminating âwaste, fraud, and abuseâ have many concerned they wonât weather the additional financial strain.
Trumpâs new law funds his priorities, like extending tax cuts that mainly benefit wealthier Americans and expanding immigration enforcement. Those costs are covered in part by a nearly $1 trillion reduction in federal health spending for Medicaid within the next decade and changes to the ACA, such as requiring additional paperwork and shortening the time for people to sign up.
Many Republicans have argued Medicaid has gotten too large and strayed from the state-federal programâs core mission of covering those with low incomes and disabilities. And the GOP has fought to roll back the ACA since its passage.
Kush Desai, a spokesperson for the White House, said projections from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office about how many people could lose health insurance are an âoverestimate.â He did not provide an estimate the administration sees as more accurate.
Supporters of the âOne Big Beautiful Billâ say those who need health coverage can still get it if they meet new requirements such as working in exchange for Medicaid coverage.
And Michael Cannon, director of health policy studies at the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank, said even with the legislation, Medicaid spending will grow, just not as quickly.
The budget law wonât cause âthe sky to fall,â Cannon said. âThe inefficient providers should be shutting down.â
from AMGA, formerly the American Medical Group Association, which represents health systems across the country, found nearly half of rural facilities could close or restructure due to Medicaid cuts. Nearly three-quarters of respondents said they anticipated layoffs or furloughs, including of front-line clinicians.
Public health departments, which often fill gaps in care, also face federal funding cuts that have reduced their capacity. In South Texasâ Cameron County, the health department has eliminated nearly a dozen positions, said agency head Esmer Guajardo. In neighboring Hidalgo County, the health department has laid off more than 30 people, said Ivan Melendez, who helps oversee its operations.
In July, the Texas Department of State Health Services , a massive annual event that last year provided free health services to nearly 6,000 South Texas residents.
Gateway Community Health Center in Laredo, a border city north of the Rio Grande Valley, is in âsurvival mode,â with about a third of patients already lacking insurance and even more who will struggle to afford health care if the ACA subsides arenât renewed, said David Vasquez, its director of communications and public affairs. The center is looking for other forms of funding to avoid layoffs or cuts to services, and its expansion and hiring plans are on hold, Vasquez said.
That downsizing is happening as more people lose health insurance and need free or reduced-cost care.
Esther Rodriguez, 39, of McAllen has been out of work for two years and her husband makes $600 a week working in construction. Neither of them has health insurance.
Medicaid covered the bills for the births of her five children. Now, she depends on a mobile health clinic run by a local medical school, where she can pay out-of-pocket for routine checkups and drugs to control her Type 2 diabetes. If she needed more care, Rodriguez said, she would go to the ER.
âYou have to adapt,â she said in Spanish.
âDeath by a Thousand Cutsâ
Peopleâs inability to pay results in uncompensated care, or services that hospitals, doctors, and clinics donât get paid for, which, under an earlier version of the megabill, was projected to increase by $204 billion over the next decade, , a nonprofit think tank.
But the Trump administration is also cutting other support that helped offset the cost of care for people who canât pay. The new law caps federal programs that many health providers for low-income people have come to depend on, especially in rural areas, to shore up their budgets. These include taxes on hospitals, health plans, and other providers that states use to help fund their Medicaid programs. Such provider taxes are a âfinancial gimmick,â Desai said.
While the law creates a temporary $50 billion fund to support rural doctors and hospitals, thatâs a little over a third of estimated Medicaid funding losses in rural areas, , a health information nonprofit that includes Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News. Desai called the analysis âflawed.â
Any loss in revenue could spell financial ruin, especially for small rural hospitals, said Quang Ngo, president of the Texas Organization of Rural & Community Hospitals Foundation.
âIt’s kind of like death by a thousand cuts,â he said. âSome will probably not make it.â
And the hits could keep coming. The Trump administrationâs budget request for the coming fiscal year calls for cuts to multiple rural health programs operated through the Health Resources and Services Administration. Desai said the spending lawâs investment in rural health âdwarfsâ the cuts.
In February, the Trump administration announced funding cuts of 90% to the ACA navigator program, which helps people find health insurance. That program has been âhistorically inefficient,â Desai said.
In December 2023, nearly 3 million of Texasâ uninsured were eligible for ACA subsidies, Medicaid, or the Childrenâs Health Insurance Program, , a public policy think tank.

Maria Salgado spends her workdays tabling at community events, dropping off flyers at doctorsâ offices, and holding one-on-one meetings with clients of MHP Salud, a nonprofit that connects residents to Medicaid and ACA coverage.
She worried funding cuts would really set the organizationâs efforts back: âA lot of community members here, theyâre going to be left behind,â said Salgado, a community health worker, or promotora.
Chris Casso, a primary care physician who grew up in McAllen and now practices there, held back tears as she described treating patients who have put off seeing a doctor because of an inability to pay, only to have their preventable conditions deteriorate.
She worries about the future of her community as , potentially leaving few providers to treat uninsured people.
âItâs heartbreaking,â she said, sitting in a small back room in her office in a suburban strip mall, wedged between a Kohlâs and a Shoe Carnival. âThese are hardworking people,â she said. âThey try their best to take care of themselves.â
Casso said her own sister, who worked as a medical biller in a physicianâs office, couldnât afford health insurance. She delayed care and died at age 45 of complications from diabetes and heart disease. Casso worries the future will find more people in similar situations.
âOur population is going to suffer,â she said. âIt’s going to be devastating.â
