| Literature DB >> 35410057 |
Natalie Wichelt1, Kenny Torres2, Gabriela de la Vega3, Julie M Linton4, Kimberly Montez1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Immigration status is a known social driver of health. Little research exists on addressing concerns about immigration status in primary care. The objective of this study is to understand the experiences of immigrant families that received a clinical-community intervention to address immigration-related concerns.Entities:
Keywords: children in immigrant families; health equity; legal problems; primary care
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35410057 PMCID: PMC8998624 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19074373
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Legal Needs Screening Participant Characteristics.
| Study Participants (N = 19) | N (%) or Mean (Range) |
|---|---|
| Parent/guardian | |
| Mother | 16 (84.2) |
| Father | 3 (15.8) |
| Parent/guardian age, years | 37 (21–58) |
| Parent/guardian race | |
| Non-Hispanic Black | 1 (5.3) |
| Hispanic | 18 (94.7) |
| Child age, years | 8 (0–19) |
| Child gender | |
| Female | 5 (26.3%) |
| Male | 14 (73.7) |
| Preferred Language | |
| English | 2 (10.5) |
| Spanish | 17 (89.5) |
| Insurance Coverage | |
| Medicaid | 14 (73.7) |
| Uninsured | 5 (26.3) |
| Country of Origin | |
| Canada | 1 (5.3) |
| Cuba | 1 (5.3) |
| El Salvador | 4 (21.0) |
| Honduras | 3 (15.8) |
| Mexico | 10 (52.6) |
Interview Participants’ Characteristics.
| Interview Participants (N = 7) | N (%) or Mean (Range) |
|---|---|
| Parent/guardian | |
| Mother | 6 (85.7) |
| Father | 1 (14.3) |
| Parent/guardian age, years | 34.4 (21–47) |
| Parent/guardian race | |
| Non-Hispanic Black | 1 (14.3) |
| Hispanic | 6 (85.7) |
| Child age, years | 4.5 (0–15) |
| Child gender | |
| Female | 2 (28.6) |
| Male | 5 (71.4) |
| Preferred Language | |
| English | 2 (28.6) |
| Spanish | 5 (71.4) |
| Insurance Coverage | |
| Medicaid | 5 (71.4) |
| Uninsured | 2 (28.6) |
| Country of Origin | |
| Canada | 1 (14.3) |
| El Salvador | 1 (14.3) |
| Honduras | 1 (14.3) |
| Mexico | 4 (57.1) |
Legal Needs Screening Tool Results.
| Study Participants (N = 19) | N (%) |
|---|---|
| Q1. Is the parent or the child in deportation proceedings or has the parent or the child ever been stopped by ICE? | 8 (42.1%) |
| Q2. Does the child or a sibling have significant/chronic health problems? | 7 (36.8%) |
| Q3. Has anyone ever filed immigration paperwork for the parent or child? | 4 (21.1%) |
| Q4. Are one or both of the child’s parents absent or uninvolved in the child’s life? | 8 (42.1%) |
| Q5. Is the child or the parent afraid to return to their home country because they will be persecuted or have been persecuted because of their political opinion, religion, race, nationality, or because of who they are? (Fear of returning to their native country because of the poverty or generalized crime is not enough) | 11 (57.9%) |
| Q6. Has the child been abused, abandoned or neglected by a legal or biological parent? | 8 (42.1%) |
| Q7. Has the child or a parent been victim of a crime, including domestic violence? | 7 (36.8%) |
| Q8. Does the child or a parent have any US citizen or lawful permanent family (parents, spouses, children older than 16)? | 10 (52.6%) |
| Q9. Was the child or a parent mistreated on their journey to the United States? | 5 (26.3%) |
| Q10. Was the child or a parent forced to work on their journey here or after they arrived? | 0 (0%) |
| Q11. Was the child or a parent persecuted, threatened, or mistreated in their country of origin? | 11 (57.9%) |
| Q12. Has the parent of the child been a victim of abuse or mistreatment by a spouse? | 5(26.3%) |
Themes, Subthemes, and Representative Quotations.
| Theme | Selected Subthemes | Selected Illustrative Quotes |
|---|---|---|
| Families were motivated to immigrate due to mental health trauma and persecution | Mental Health Trauma of Parent or Child was a Motivator for Immigration | “I was psychologically manipulated as well. Not just with hitting [physically] but psychologically as well. Sometimes I felt desperate.” |
| “I have also had depression and all that. I want us to be [in the US] together peacefully but sometimes [my daughter] cuts herself off from the world. She doesn’t go out, or sometimes she doesn’t even get out of bed. Sometimes she hits the other kids. She feels that maybe it would have been better if she wasn’t born or that it would have been better if I miscarried her before she was born, and well that hurts me; it hurts me a lot.” | ||
| “I was assaulted by the father of my daughter who would hit me and harass me. He ran over me with a car, and yet he was the one who spoke with the police.” | ||
| Persecution Played a Role in Immigrating | “I had to leave for a neighboring city to a friend’s [house]. I don’t know how [the gang] knew where this friend was hiding me. They arrived one night, and they shot two or three times in the air. I then called the police because my children were young, very scared, crying. So now it was an imminent threat. Later I also received quite a few threats.” | |
| “In the case of the children’s father, I wanted to file a lawsuit, because he was threatening that he was going to take away my daughter. Financially [her father] was fine there. He could buy off the lawyers and he could buy off, if he wanted, the judge to take custody of the child.” | ||
| Families Sought Legal Services for a Variety of Immigration-related Concerns | “I want identification. Imagine, I don’t even have an ID here, not even permit or anything because the only identification I have is from Honduras and the one from Honduras is no longer valid.” | |
| “I was the victim of a crime in which they robed my house. I wanted to ask [the lawyer], because they told me that I could get a worker’s permit, the U Visa, because of this crime so for that I wanted help.” | ||
| “Right now, I’m worried since all of this is going on, and they still haven’t put a stable process in DACA so I would maybe look forward to seeing how I can basically get permanent status where I won’t have to worry about it. I want to continue school and stuff but with me being unemployed and not being from here it’s hard for me to go back to school because everybody charges out of state.” | ||
| “I brought [my daughter] here for asylum but they didn’t permit her through. I did everything possible so they would give her asylum, but no. Maybe the immigration [police] don’t realize who in reality really needs [asylum], and they give support to someone who doesn’t need it, instead of the person who is fleeing [persecution].” | ||
| Immigrant Families Experienced Challenges in Navigating the Legal System, With Which Clinics May Assist | Financial Limitations Presented Barriers to Receiving Legal Services | “The only problem was that I needed the help with benefits. I’m not working, and I’m a single mom, and the lawyer was charging me $600 to complete my DACA process. And I’m telling you [I have] no job; I’m unemployed with a child, so I couldn’t really afford it but other than that it was actually great.” |
| “So, justifiably, we had to practically sell what little we had to come here. At that time when I came, no one wanted to lend me the money so I that could come [here], not even the bank. So, I had to pawn a piece of land, for which I didn’t get much.” | ||
| “I met with [the lawyer] at the consultation, and then he did some research for us. We met a second time but then that’s when we just had to try doing the paperwork on our own because of the cost at that point.” | ||
| Distrust in the Immigration Legal System Caused Frustration | “We originally had hired a lawyer that ended up basically just taking our money and didn’t do anything for us. So, because of our prior issues that we had with our first lawyer that took forever to try to do paperwork and sucked the money out of our wallets.” | |
| “[The lawyer] told me that we should go to a psychologist, and maybe with that it would be possible that they could sign the [visa] forms. But it still hasn’t been done. Well, I don’t know if really the lawyer is good for that or not; I don’t know.” | ||
| “Well, the experience was very unpleasant because he didn’t pay attention to me. He reviewed my case. He told me I had a deportation order. I mean, since I [presented to the border], I was automatically taken by ICE without a deportation order. Finally, I told him that what I needed was for him to help me with a [work] permit. He said yes that the permit would come in six months and that I would be charged $1800. Then I thought [the price] was too high and did not see that he was a trustful person; he was a person that… Sometimes there are people who, when you talk, you see their interest [only in the case]. And actually, the lawyer who saw me wasn’t interested in my case.” | ||
| Participants Had Positive Feedback about the Clinic Experience | “The referral to the immigration lawyer was very useful.” | |
| “Well, I think that the form is fine, because when someone needs it, they are able to read it and see that you also offer immigration support.” | ||
| “Honestly, [the referral] was very helpful, and if I can ask for resources to pay for [legal services], I’ll pay for it so that my child can have his residency.” | ||
| “We appreciated that for free [the lawyer] went and got us in the right direction.” |