Dr. Reza Chowdhury didn鈥檛 charge copays when his patients were low on cash. He gave them his home phone number and answered their medical questions at all hours. Once, when Chowdhury鈥檚 daughter, Nikita Rahman, struck up a conversation with a New York taxi driver, it turned out that he was from Bangladesh and knew her dad: 鈥淒r. Reza? He鈥檚 my doctor 鈥 he鈥檚 the best doctor!鈥 she recalled.
An internal medicine physician with a practice in the Bronx, Chowdhury had studied medicine in his native Bangladesh before immigrating to the United States 30 years ago. He left his family back home while he settled in, and worked as a tutor, a waiter and a security guard as he trained to practice in the U.S.
When COVID-19 came to New York, Rahman pleaded with her father, who had had a kidney transplant and was therefore immunocompromised, to stay home. But he kept working until mid-March, when he developed symptoms. He died on April 9.
The U.S. relies on immigrant labor 鈥 from doctors to nurses to health aides 鈥 to keep its health system afloat. And now immigrant health workers are dying at high rates during the pandemic. Lost on the Frontline, a joint project by KHN and The Guardian, has found that nearly one-third of health care workers who were confirmed to have died of COVID-19 were born outside the U.S. However, immigrants account for just of the U.S. population and of its health care force.
Chowdhury, 58, belonged to a nonprofit network of health care providers in New York called SOMOS that has been devastated during the pandemic. Founded with the aim of providing 鈥渃ulturally competent care鈥 to low-income New Yorkers, most of its 2,500 physicians and nurses are immigrants, like their patients. They come from Bangladesh, the Dominican Republic and Egypt, among other places. In the early months of the pandemic, SOMOS reported that 12 of its physicians and nurse practitioners had died of COVID-19.
鈥淥ur patients are the ones who wash dishes, prepare food, ride buses, drive taxis,鈥 said Dr. Ramon Tallaj, SOMOS鈥 chairman and co-founder. 鈥淎nd we鈥檙e risking our lives for our patients.鈥 Chowdhury practiced in a working-class section of the Bronx, a borough hit hard by the coronavirus.

Most of SOMOS鈥 practitioners are primary care providers 鈥 family doctors, pediatricians, nurse practitioners. 鈥淲e鈥檙e neighborhood doctors,鈥 Tallaj said. 鈥淲e work with poor people in poor neighborhoods, and we speak the same languages as our patients 鈥 none of our doctors are on Park Avenue.鈥
He said that at the outset of the pandemic public attention and funding went to hospitals and emergency care, while he and his colleagues pooled resources to buy personal protective gear and set up neighborhood testing sites.
It turns out that this early exposure to patients, before they were sick enough to visit the ER,聽 might have made these workers more vulnerable: A recent found that primary care providers 鈥渕ay have been more likely to see patients with early-stage, mild or asymptomatic 鈥 but still contagious 鈥 SARS-CoV-2 infection, while having little to no personal protective equipment.鈥
Family physician Dr. Ydelfonso Decoo, 70, was the quintessential neighborhood doctor. From his practice in New York City鈥檚 Washington Heights, he saw generations of patients walk through his doors. Patients and their families 鈥 many immigrants from the Dominican Republic, like him 鈥 stopped to say hello when they saw him in the street.
鈥淗e loved his community and he always took time to listen to them,鈥 said Dorka C谩ceres, his assistant of 20 years. Decoo saw patients through late March, when he developed symptoms.
Dr. Ashraf Metwally was a Brooklyn family physician originally from Egypt. Dahlia Ibrahim, a family friend, described him as a 鈥渟taple鈥 in the local Arab community. A cancer survivor who helped out in emergency rooms early in the pandemic, Metwally 鈥渉elped people. That鈥檚 just who he was,鈥 Ibrahim .
鈥淭hese providers were like firefighters,鈥 said Liz Webb, SOMOS鈥 vice president for human resources. 鈥淭hey were going into their communities, communicating in their languages, and making sure [people] didn鈥檛 worry about their immigration status鈥 when seeking out testing, she said.
To cope with the loss of their colleagues and uncertainty about the future, SOMOS doctors have organized a nightly prayer group on Zoom that draws dozens of participants. And they鈥檝e begun to lend their services to new COVID hot spots: This summer, they sent health workers to Georgia and Florida to volunteer in clinics and hospitals.
Chowdhury鈥檚 family has spent the past few months learning what he meant to his patients. They were overwhelmed by the outpouring of grief and support from people around the world who had sought his care or advice at one point or another. When they held an online memorial, they struggled to find a platform that could accommodate everyone who wanted to pay their respects, Chowdhury鈥檚 daughter said.
鈥淶oom maxes you out at, like, 200 users, so we used another [service] that allowed 500, and even then we were at capacity,鈥 she said.
This story is part of 鈥Lost on the Frontline,鈥 an ongoing project from聽聽and Kaiser Health News that aims to document the lives of health care workers in the U.S. who die from COVID-19, and to investigate why so many are victims of the disease. If you have a colleague or loved one we should include, please聽.
麻豆女优 Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at 麻豆女优鈥攁n independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about .