Raffa Brittany J, Higgins Isabella C A, Montiel Catalina, Stafford Allison McCord, Cholera Rushina
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, USA.
Duke University, Durham, USA.
J Immigr Minor Health. 2025 Jun 27. doi: 10.1007/s10903-025-01714-w.
Mixed-documentation status Latino families face unique barriers to accessing healthcare and public benefits. We examined the experiences of undocumented Latina mothers in North Carolina and the role of anti-immigrant policies and rhetoric in their decisions to access care and public benefits for themselves and their U.S.-born infants. We conducted a qualitative descriptive study to explore Latina mothers' experiences seeking care for themselves and their infants during the perinatal period. We used Emergency Medicaid at delivery as a proxy to identify undocumented mothers with U.S.-born infants. Twenty semi-structured audio interviews were conducted in Spanish via Zoom. We used rapid qualitative content analysis for timely, action-oriented analysis. Rapid qualitative analysis uses visual displays, such as matrices, to connect and analyze findings. Five themes emerged: confusion around public benefit eligibility and complicated enrollment processes; concerns and fears around immigration policy and rhetoric; cost as the most influential barrier to healthcare; positive experiences with language support and respectfulness of providers; "making it work" with the help of social support systems. While mothers narrated their experiences in the setting of prohibitive costs of accessing healthcare and fears and confusion about public benefits, they viewed meeting their child's health needs as a necessity, with social support systems important in navigating complex systems. Postpartum undocumented mothers with U.S.-born infants experience several barriers to NC Medicaid and public benefit enrollment for their infants, including complicated application processes, costs, and immigration-related fear. Advocacy is needed to prevent the dismantling of existing policies and create inclusive policies for immigrants.
混合文件状态的拉丁裔家庭在获得医疗保健和公共福利方面面临独特障碍。我们研究了北卡罗来纳州无证拉丁裔母亲的经历,以及反移民政策和言论在她们为自己和美国出生的婴儿获取医疗保健和公共福利的决策中所起的作用。我们进行了一项定性描述性研究,以探索拉丁裔母亲在围产期为自己和婴儿寻求医疗保健的经历。我们将分娩时使用紧急医疗补助作为识别有无证美国出生婴儿母亲的替代指标。通过Zoom以西班牙语进行了20次半结构化音频访谈。我们采用快速定性内容分析进行及时的、以行动为导向的分析。快速定性分析使用视觉展示,如矩阵,来联系和分析研究结果。出现了五个主题:公共福利资格的困惑和复杂的登记过程;对移民政策和言论的担忧和恐惧;成本是医疗保健最具影响力的障碍;语言支持以及提供者的尊重带来的积极体验;在社会支持系统的帮助下“解决问题”。虽然母亲们讲述了她们在获得医疗保健成本高昂以及对公共福利的恐惧和困惑背景下的经历,但她们将满足孩子的健康需求视为必要之事,社会支持系统在应对复杂系统方面很重要。产后有无证美国出生婴儿的母亲在为其婴儿登记北卡罗来纳州医疗补助和公共福利方面面临诸多障碍,包括复杂的申请流程、成本以及与移民相关的恐惧。需要进行倡导,以防止现有政策被废除,并为移民制定包容性政策。