Journal of Migration and Health (Jan 2024)

Between the lines: A mixed-methods study on the impacts of parental deportation on the health and well-being of U.S. citizen children

  • Ana Martinez-Donate,
  • M. Gudelia Rangel,
  • Jamile Tellez Lieberman,
  • J. Eduardo Gonzalez-Fagoaga,
  • Catalina Amuedo-Dorantes,
  • Elizabeth McGhee Hassrick,
  • Carmen Valdez,
  • Kevin Wagner,
  • Yosselin Turcios,
  • Ahmed Asadi Gonzalez,
  • Xiao Zhang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9
p. 100233

Abstract

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Objective: To explore the impacts of parental deportation on the health and well-being of U.S. citizen children of Mexican immigrants. Methods: From 2019–2020, this ambi-directional cohort study recruited U.S.-based families with an undocumented Mexican immigrant parent and U.S.-citizen childrens (ages 13–17) recently exposed to parental deportation (N = 61), and similar families without a history of parental deportation (N = 51). Children health, behavioral, economic, and academic outcomes were measured via phone surveys upon enrollment and six months later. A subsample of “exposed” caregivers (N = 14) also completed in-depth semi-structured interviews. Data were analyzed using fixed-effects regression models and thematic analyses. Results: Childrens exposed to parental deportation had significantly worse health status, behavioral problems, material hardship, and academic outcomes than children in the control arm (p<.05). Caregivers’ interviews illustrated these health, behavioral, academic and family impacts. Conclusions: Parental deportations have wide and potentially long-lasting health, behavioral, economic, and academic consequences for U.S. citizen youth. Changes in immigration policies and enforcement practices are urgently needed to protect the unity of mixed-legal status families in the U.S. and prevent the suffering of U.S. children in these families.

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