4.5 Article

Addressing Health Inequities for Children in Immigrant Families: Psychologists as Leaders and Links Across Systems

Journal

AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGIST
Volume 78, Issue 2, Pages 173-185

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/amp0001016

Keywords

children in immigrant families; mental health; health equity; multidisciplinary teams

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This article discusses the role of psychologists in addressing social determinants of health and health equity among approximately 20 million children in immigrant families. Psychologists can advocate for changes in institutional systems, promote resources and services, and address the challenges faced by immigrant families. They can also lead prevention efforts, change systems, expand workforce development, identify mechanisms contributing to health inequity, and advocate for resources at different levels of government. Strengthening relationships between academic and professional institutions and policymakers is crucial to increase psychologists' impact.
What can psychologists do to address social determinants of health and promote health equity among America's approximately 20 million children in immigrant families (CIF)? This article identifies gaps in current research and argues for a stronger role for psychologists. Psychologists can advocate for and enact changes in institutional systems that contribute to inequities in social determinants of health and promote resources and services necessary for CIF to flourish. We consider systemic exclusionary and discriminatory barriers faced by CIF, including a heightened anti-immigrant political climate, continued threat of immigration enforcement, restricted access to the social safety net, and the disproportionate health, economic, and educational burden of the COVID-19 pandemic. We highlight the potential role of psychologists in (a) leading prevention that addresses stressors such as poverty and trauma; (b) changing systems to mitigate risk factors for CIF; (c) expanding workforce development across multiple disciplines to better serve their needs; (d) identifying mechanisms, such as racial profiling, that contribute to health inequity, and viewing them as public health harms; and (e) guiding advocacy for resources at local, state, and federal levels, including by linking discriminatory policies or practices with health inequity. A key recommendation to increase psychologists' impact is for academic and professional institutions to strengthen relationships with policymakers to effectively convey these findings in spaces where decisions about policies and practices are made. We conclude that psychologists are well positioned to promote systemic change across multiple societal levels and disciplines to improve the well-being of CIF and offer them a better future.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available