Family Unity, Family Health: Federal Immigration Policy Reform

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Family Unity, Family Health: Federal Immigration Policy Reform
Location Federal
Organization Human Impact Partners

Human Impact Partners conducted a health impact assessment (HIA) to assess how current U.S. immigration policy, and specifically the threat of detention and deportation, can affect the health and mental health of parents and children living in mixed-status families. If deportations continued at 2012 levels, the HIA estimated that child health, behavioral, and educational outcomes would decline. Households would likely experience higher rates of poverty and diminished access to food due to the absence of the primary household earner. The HIA made several recommendations including that state child welfare plans include policies to promote reunification of children with parents and legal guardians who have been detained or deported; ensuring that the 'Border Security, Economic Opportunity, and Immigration Modernization Act' includes components to allow for a direct, clear, convenient, and affordable path to citizenship; and reforming Department of Homeland Security programs and policies to protect the health and well-being of children whose parents or primary caregivers are undergoing detention or deportation proceedings.

Human Impact Partners collaborated with a nationwide group of advocacy, community organizations and academic researchers to complete the HIA.

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The Health Impact Project’s toolkit contains resources that help communities, agencies, and other organizations take action to improve public health. The toolkit offers a collection of health impact assessments, guides, and other research to support policymakers’ efforts to consider health when making decisions across sectors, such as housing, planning, and education.

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At A Glance
  • Status:
    Completed
  • Publication date:
    2013, June
  • Decision-making levels:
    Federal
  • Sectors:
    Other
  • Additional topic areas:
    Legislation, Mental/behavioral health, Programs, Reform
  • Drivers of health:
    Access to healthy food, Adverse childhood experiences, Education, Family and social support, Income and wealth
  • Affected populations:
    Children
  • Research methods:
    Survey, Focus groups, Primary research, Qualitative research, Quantitative research
  • Funding source:
    Other funding