Department of Prevention & Community Health, Milken Institute School of Public Health, The George Washington University, Washington, District of Columbia.
Department of Sociology and Department of Public Policy & Public Administration, The George Washington University, Washington, District of Columbia.
J Adolesc Health. 2018 May;62(5):525-531. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2018.01.004. Epub 2018 Mar 2.
U.S. Latino parents of adolescents face unprecedented threats to family stability and well-being due to rapid and far-reaching transformations in U.S. immigration policy.
Two hundred thirteen Latino parents of adolescents were recruited from community settings in a suburb of a large mid-Atlantic city to complete surveys assessing parents' psychological distress and responses to immigration actions and news. Univariate and bivariate analyses were conducted to describe the prevalence of parents' responses to immigration news and actions across diverse residency statuses. Multiple logistic regression models examined associations between immigration-related impacts and the odds of a parent's high psychological distress.
Permanent residents, temporary protected status, and undocumented parents reported significantly more negative immigration impacts on psychological states than U.S. citizens. Parents reporting frequent negative immigration-related impacts had a significantly higher likelihood of high psychological distress than did other parents, and these associations were maintained even when accounting for parents' residency status, gender, education, and experience with deportation or detention. The odds of a parent reporting high psychological distress due to negative immigration impacts ranged from 2.2 (p < .05) to 10.4 (p < .001).
This is one of the first empirical accounts of how recent immigration policy changes and news have impacted the lives of Latino families raising adolescent children. Harmful impacts were manifest across a range of parent concerns and behaviors and are strong correlates of psychological distress. Findings suggest a need to consider pathways to citizenship for Latina/o parents so that these parents, many of whom are legal residents, may effectively care for their children.
由于美国移民政策的快速和深远转变,美国拉丁裔青少年的父母正面临着前所未有的家庭稳定和幸福的威胁。
从美国大西洋中部一个大城市郊区的社区环境中招募了 213 名拉丁裔青少年的父母,让他们完成了评估父母心理困扰以及对移民行动和新闻的反应的调查。进行了单变量和双变量分析,以描述不同居住身份的父母对移民新闻和行动的反应的普遍性。多元逻辑回归模型检验了与移民相关的影响与父母心理困扰高的几率之间的关联。
永久居民、临时保护身份和无证父母报告的对心理状态的负面移民影响明显高于美国公民。与其他父母相比,报告经常受到负面移民相关影响的父母更有可能出现高度心理困扰,即使考虑到父母的居住身份、性别、教育程度以及被驱逐或拘留的经历,这些关联仍然存在。由于负面移民影响而报告高度心理困扰的父母的几率范围从 2.2(p<0.05)到 10.4(p<0.001)。
这是首批实证研究之一,研究了最近的移民政策变化和新闻如何影响抚养青少年子女的拉丁裔家庭的生活。有害影响表现在一系列父母关注的问题和行为中,并且与心理困扰密切相关。研究结果表明,需要为拉丁裔父母考虑公民身份的途径,以便这些父母中的许多人是合法居民,可以有效地照顾他们的孩子。