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Children Of Undocumented Parents Could Be At Higher Developmental Risk

Posted on: Monday, 13 July 2009, 12:43 CDT

UCLA study finds a connection that is not as apparent with Latino and white children whose parents are documented or who are US citizens

Undocumented people live in a shadowy world of high fear and stress -- fear of deportation and stress brought on lack of economic, linguistic and educational resources.

And of course if they are parents their worries trickle down to their children. A new study from UCLA examines parents' concerns about development, learning and behavior for young children of Mexican origin and identifies whether these concerns differ by the families' citizenship or documentation status.

The study appears in the July-August issue of the journal Academic Pediatrics. It shows that, as reported by the parent, Mexican children with an undocumented parent have greater developmental risk than do Latino and white children whose parents are documented or who are U.S. citizens.

"In the United States, nearly 4.9 million or 25 percent of children younger than five years old are Latino, which makes them the largest group of young minority children," said Alexander Ortega, a professor of public health and a professor of psychiatry at the UCLA Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior. "That's huge. With Mexicans as the vast majority of Latino children — 64 percent — understanding their health, well-being and the development of Mexican children is critical, given future U.S. demographic changes."

He added that the concern "is there are a significant number of children with an undocumented parent whose developmental risks may be missed by the health care sector."

What's less clear, say the authors, is what's causing the concern
. Few studies have examined the impact of immigration on children's development and behavior. Studies have identified that immigrant children tend to have more behavioral problems and learning difficulties in school, which may be attributable to immigration stress. Another study found that a majority of Mexican immigrant mothers perceived their children as having significant delays in language skills. These studies suggest that children who have immigrated, as well as U.S.-born children whose parents have immigrated, may have greater risk in early childhood, but until now little data have been available on how parent perceptions of developmental risk vary with immigration status.

The authors employed the California Health Interview Survey a population-based study of households drawn from every county in California that included Latino children and families, and information on the documentation status of the parents. The survey also included the Parents' Evaluation of Developmental Status (PEDS), which provides information on parents' perceptions of their children's development. Combined, the two reporting tools allowed the authors to examine the associations of family documentation and citizenship status on parents' reports of their children's development.

The sample included 5,856 children under the age of six; of that number, 1,786 had Mexican ancestry. The data were collected in English and Spanish. The response rate was 25 percent, which is consistent with those of general telephone surveys and similar to other recent major telephone health surveys nationwide.

The researchers found that Mexican children with an undocumented parent have higher odds of parent-reported developmental risk compared to white children or to Mexican children with parents who are citizens or otherwise legally authorized. Interestingly, said Ortega, it didn't appear that characteristics commonly associated with parent-reported developmental risk — household income, parent education and household language — fully explain the association between documentation status and developmental risk for Mexican children in the survey sample.

"From the survey, it's difficult to know the extent to which elevated reports of developmental problems for children with undocumented parents are due to actual differences in development versus an unmet need of parents," said Ortega. "In general, parents need reassurance from pediatric care providers about the typical development of their children. We know the undocumented have significant problems for access to healthcare, so parents may have certain expectations of development that are shaping their concerns," he said.

Timely access to primary care for young children can ameliorate parental worries or provide guidance on development-promoting activities. "The process of listening and responding to parent concerns is a major component of prevention within pediatrics," noted Ortega. Parents who are not receiving this regular reassurance may have more concerns about their kids' development, he said.

Further research is needed to understand which factors are contributing to the observations of the parents, he said. "Unmet physical and mental health needs among the undocumented parents themselves may shape their perceptions of concerns in their children," Ortega noted.



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User Comments (5)

5. Posted by Delaware Bob on 07/15/2009, 09:02
\"Undocumented people live in a shadowy world of high fear and stress -- fear of deportation and stress brought on lack of economic...\" If you are living in fear, you shouldn\'t be here. Go back to your own country and live without fear. It\'s that simple!
4. Posted by Anonyma on 07/15/2009, 07:37
This study is flawed because the populations it compares are not parallel. The study's findings are presented in terms of race, but comparing the children of illegal-alien Latinos to the children of legal citizen whites is actually a question of criminal-career parents versus law-abiding parents and not one of race. If race is to be the factor examined, both populations of parents must be career criminals, so illegal alien latinos would have to be compared to American-citizen career criminals. It's to be assumed that having parents who set up life outside the laws of the nation will create stress for the kids -- but this study fails to examine the question and instead plays the tiny violin in support of amnesty. The parents can relieve their children of the doubtful status of their family by self-deporting and taking the children with them.
3. Posted by Mark on 07/14/2009, 12:08
The sins of the father will visit upon the children.
2. Posted by Delaware Bob on 07/14/2009, 12:00
"Undocumented people live in a shadowy world of high fear and stress -- fear of deportation and stress..." They should be living in fear! They have no right to be here. If I were somewhere where I didn't belong, I'd be a little fearful also. The way to end this fear and stress is to get out of this Country and go back where they belong. They would be living in fear there now will they? How simple is that?
1. Posted by jackbenimble on 07/14/2009, 08:00
If the illegal aliens loved their children they would stay home and not subject them to the stresses that come with living a lie and being in constant fear of caught and facing justice. But what would one expect from criminals who choose to break our laws on a daily basis? First by entering illegally and then with the ongoing felonies of identity theft, unauthorized employment, tax evasion, etc. Criminals can't really be expected to care about their children. I certainly hope that my tax dollars were not used to fund this study. They could have been better spent on enforcing our immigration laws.

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