Journal article
Deporting immigrant parents: Impact on the health and well-being of their citizen children
European journal of public health, v 30(Supplement_5)
01 Sep 2020
Abstract
Abstract
Background
In the United States (U.S.), over 4 million citizen children live with an unauthorized immigrant parent who is at risk of deportation. Children of Mexican immigrants are disproportionately represented among this population, as 1 out of 3 deported immigrants are from Mexico. Parental deportation can have profound and long-lasting consequences for children, yet research on this topic is sparse. We present preliminary findings from an ongoing, longitudinal study examining changes in health, well-being, behavior, and environmental factors among U.S. citizen children of recently deported Mexican immigrants.
Methods
Forty-eight deported Mexican parents were recruited from deportation processing stations on the Mexican border region. We completed phone interviews with one of their U.S.-based, citizen children and an adult caregiver, collecting retrospective information on health, health behavior, household, academics, and socio-ecological health determinants from a year earlier, as well as shortly after deportation of their parent. Pre-post analyses of caregivers' survey data were conducted to assess changes in outcomes associated with parental deportation.
Results
Following deportation of their parents, children were reported to have more frequent health problems (p=.008), including mental health problems (p=.002), externalizing (p=.040) and internalizing (p=.011) behaviors, school absences (p=.092), and experiences of food insecurity (p=.007) than a year before. Academic expectations were also significantly worse (p=.006) than those prior to parental deportation.
Conclusions
Children are the unintended victims of indiscriminate immigration enforcement. Deportation of parents is associated with significant deterioration of physical and mental health, behavior, academics, and home environment for their U.S. citizen children. Our results call for immigration policy reform and interventions to support families affected by the deportation of a parent.
Key messages
Immigration policies that separate families can have significant detrimental impacts on the health and well-being of U.S. citizen children. Policies must be revised to keep families together and protect children in mixed-legal status families.
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Details
- Title
- Deporting immigrant parents: Impact on the health and well-being of their citizen children
- Creators
- A Martinez-Donate - Drexel UniversityJ Tellez Lieberman - Drexel University, Philadelphia, USAL Bakely - Drexel UniversityC Correa - Drexel UniversityC Valdez - The University of Texas at AustinE McGhee Hassrick - Drexel UniversityE Gonzalez-Fagoaga - U.S.-Mexico Border Health Commission, Tijuana, MexicoA Asadi Gonzalez - Autonomous University of Baja California, Tijuana, MexicoG Rangel Gomez - U.S.-Mexico Border Health Commission, Tijuana, Mexico
- Publication Details
- European journal of public health, v 30(Supplement_5)
- Publisher
- Oxford University Press
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- A.J. Drexel Autism Institute; Community Health and Prevention
- Other Identifier
- 991019170147704721