A new study shows that well-child visits for children with immigrant mothers in the US declined following Trump’s hostile public stances on migration during his presidential campaign and presidency.
Immigration was a defining issue of Donald Trump’s campaign and presidency, and his well-documented embrace of xenophobic and racist rhetoric and policies during his administration led many immigrant families to fear for their safety and immigration status in the US.
Trump’s anti-immigrant agenda also contributed to a decline in the number of immigrant parents who sought preventative healthcare for their children, according to a new study led by a Boston University School of Public Health (BUSPH) researcher.
Published in the journal Health Affairs Scholar, the study found that Trump’s election was associated with a five-percentage-point decrease in well-child visits for children of immigrant mothers, compared to children of US-born mothers.
The study is the first to examine whether the avoidance of social services or healthcare as a result of immigration status-related fears—known as the “chilling effect”—affected healthcare utilization among very young children in the US. The new findings suggest that young children of immigrants may have missed vital routine or preventative pediatric care, such as early childhood vaccinations and health and developmental screenings, during the Trump administration.
We found that Trump's rhetoric and election were already driving parents’ decisions about seeking preventive healthcare for their young children, even before some of these policies were implemented. Missing well-child visits is deeply worrisome since so many vital health and development checks and referrals happen at these visits, where waiting could mean long-term harms to health or developmental delays. In addition, parents miss out on support and connections to other resources, which could potentially compound existing inequities.Dr. Stephanie Ettinger de Cuba, research associate professor of health law, policy & management and pediatrics at BUSPH and Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine
For the study, Dr. Ettinger de Cuba and colleagues from Boston Medical Center (BMC), BU Chobanian and Avedisian School of Medicine, Boston University School of Social Work (SSW), and Hennepin Healthcare and the University of Minnesota School of Medicine (UM) analyzed health and healthcare survey and electronic health record data from Children’s HealthWatch (CHW) pertaining to nearly 11,000 children of immigrant and US-born parents or caregivers in three US cities (Boston, Minneapolis, and Little Rock, Ark.). The study period took place between 2015-2018, during the Trump campaign and the early months of his presidency. During this time, the Trump administration implemented a slew of anti-immigrant policies and executive actions such as travel bans on travelers from several Muslim-majority countries, a dramatic increase in interior immigration enforcement, and unprecedented restrictions for asylum seekers at the US-Mexico border.
The team examined patterns of well-child visits, based on routine care schedules recommended for children between infancy and four years old. The number of well-child visits for children with immigrant mothers dropped from 54 percent prior to the 2016 election to nearly 49 percent by 2017 – a 9-percent relative decrease - compared to no change among US-born families, after Trump assumed office.
The researchers also conducted a secondary analysis of a chilling effect on children of immigrant mothers following the well-publicized leak of the administration’s plan to dramatically expand the public programs considered as part of the “public charge” rule, a rule that examines whether the person is likely to be primarily dependent on the government, which in turn can be grounds for denying a green card. Although the administration ultimately did not adopt the specific changes in the leaked document, the study results suggest that even the possibility of the policy change likely contributed to greater decreases in immigrant parents’ adherence to early childhood well-child visits.
The team also investigated whether Trump’s election contributed to a decline in emergency department visits and hospitalizations among children with immigrant mothers but found no association.
The researchers hope their study calls attention to the real-life consequences of inflammatory and dangerous campaign rhetoric and government policies.
“These results underscore the need for changes to both laws and regulations that recognize the individual and societal impact of ensuring immigrant families can meet all of their basic needs, including healthcare, without fear,” says Dr. Ettinger de Cuba. Current legislation, such as the federal HEAL Act and the LIFT the BAR Act, would go a long way to reducing fear, she says, and the findings underscore why recent attempts to reinstate the Trump-era definition of public charge are so harmful, even as proposals.
“Words matter and have real-life consequences in campaigns and governance,” Dr. Ettinger de Cuba says. “Much more work is needed to rebuild trust in immigrant communities.”
The study’s senior author is the late David Jones, professor of health law, policy & management at BUSPH. The study was also coauthored by Julia Raifman, adjunct assistant professor of health law, policy & management at BUSPH; Daniel Miller, director of PhD program & associate professor at SSW; Diana Becker Cutts, chief of pediatrics at Hennepin Healthcare and associate professor of pediatrics at UM; Allison Bovell-Ammon, assistant professor of pediatrics at BU Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine at the time of the study; and Deborah A. Frank, Professor of Child Health and Wellbeing at the Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine and director of the Grow Clinic for Children at BMC
(SC/Newswise)