Muhammad Shahzaib Bajwa was spending a semester at the University of Wisconsin-Superior when he was riding in a fellow student's car that struck a deer.
Bajwa suffered severe facial injuries and eventual cardiac arrest and brain damage.
Bajwa has been at Essentia Health-St Mary's Medical Centre in Minnesota, where his family said last week that officials were pressuring them to agree to his return to Pakistan because his visa was about to expire at the end of this month.
It's not unusual for US hospitals seeking to curb high costs to effectively deport foreign citizens back home, even when they're comatose, an Associated Press review found last year.
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Hospitals typically pay for the flights for these "medical repatriations," often without consulting any courts or federal agencies, the AP's review found.
Bajwa's brother, Shahraiz Bajwa, told The Associated Press that Pakistan's consul general in Chicago told him his brother's visa is not an issue anymore.
Consulate officials did not immediately return a message seeking comment.
State Department spokesman Mark Thornburg said he had no new information on Bajwa's case.
Muhammad Bajwa remained in fair condition yesterday, hospital spokeswoman Maureen Talarico said, but privacy laws prevented her from providing other information about him.