'Fear of Trump' Is Making Some Children
Physically Sick, Say Health Experts
After
a campaign built on xenophobic remarks, a pledge to construct a massive wall
across the southern border, and promises to form "a deportation
force" to rid the nation of millions of undocumented immigrants, it's not
surprising the psychological impact of Donald Trump's rhetoric would be most
sharply felt among those living within those communities.
And
now, with the reality setting in that Trump will soon by the President of the
United States, the Guardian reports how pediatricians serving in communities with large populations of undocumented
immigrants are seeing a spike in anxiety-related physical illnesses, most
notably among children expressing worry that they, their parents, or other
loved ones will soon be arrested or deported.
"People worry their families will be broken up, that parents will be deported and children will end up in foster care, on a scale that we’ve never seen before. The feeling out there is one of great fear." —Marielena Hincapié, National Immigration Law Center
As
the Guardian's Andrew Gumbel reports:
Children
are showing up in emergency rooms alone because their parents are afraid of
being picked up by Immigration and Customs Enforcement if they show their
faces. Even American-born children are suffering – one boy in the south-east
asked a doctor for Prozac because he was worried about his undocumented friend.
"It’s
as though a volcano erupted. It’s been awful," said Mimi Lind, director of
behavioral health at the Venice Family Clinic, one of the largest providers of
healthcare to low-income families in southern California. "People who
don’t have a history of anxiety and depression are coming forward with symptoms
they’ve never had before. And people who had those symptoms already are getting
much worse."
It’s
too soon to put precise figures on the wave of Trump-related anxiety, but
health professionals and immigrant rights groups say it is unmistakable.
"People worry their families will be broken up, that parents will be
deported and children will end up in foster care, on a scale that we’ve never
seen before. The feeling out there is one of great fear," said Marielena
Hincapié of the National Immigration Law Center.
In
addition to his own comments, Trumps'
nomination of Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-AL), an
anti-immigration hardliner, to be the next Attorney General has only
increased those fears.
Beyond the worries about what might happen to older
family members, many teenagers and young adults from immigrant families—namely
those brought to the US as minors and known as DREAMers—are also facing
uncertainty about what the future holds for them.
Feeling
somewhat protected under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA)—an
executive order issued by President Obama—many of those young people are
increasingly unsure of what will happen when the Republicans take full control
of Congress and Trump arrives in the White House.
Twenty-year-old
Josue De Luna, a student living in New Mexico, told the Albuquerque
Journal that whatever happens after Trump's inauguration, he and other
immigration rights advocates are bracing for a fight.
"We
are concerned about our future, but we are definitely here to stay," De
Luna told the Journal. "This is our home. It’s going to be four years
of intense fighting and trying to protect all the progress the immigrant
movement has accomplished."
But
as some prepare to fight back, those working in immigrant and low-income
communities say it is becoming increasingly hard to assure anxious residents
that everything will be okay.
Lind,
the behavioral health specialist who spoke with the Guardian, says that
the anticipation of what Trump and the Republicans might do is "the most
anxiety-provoking" aspect of the current moment.
"No
one can say anything," she said. "We have no way of allaying people’s
anxiety with concrete facts."