Beyond "Chilling Effects": Latinx and Asian Immigrants' Experiences With Enforcement and Barriers to Health Care.

TitleBeyond "Chilling Effects": Latinx and Asian Immigrants' Experiences With Enforcement and Barriers to Health Care.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsYoung, M-EDe Trinida, Tafolla, S, Saadi, A, Sudhinaraset, M, Chen, L, Pourat, N
JournalMed Care
Volume61
Issue5
Pagination306-313
Date Published2023 May 01
ISSN1537-1948
KeywordsAsian, California, Deportation, Emigrants and Immigrants, Emigration and Immigration, Fear, Health Services Accessibility, Hispanic or Latino, Humans, Law Enforcement, Social Control, Formal, Social Determinants of Health, Systemic Racism
Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Immigration enforcement policies are associated with immigrants' barriers to health care. Current evidence suggests that enforcement creates a "chilling effect" in which immigrants avoid care due to fear of encountering enforcement. Yet, there has been little examination of the impact of immigrants' direct encounters with enforcement on health care access. We examined some of the first population-level data on Asian and Latinx immigrants' encounters with law and immigration enforcement and assessed associations with health care access.

METHODS: We analyzed the 2018 and 2019 Research on Immigrant Health and State Policy survey in which Asian and Latinx immigrants in California (n=1681) reported on 7 enforcement experiences (eg, racial profiling and deportation). We examined the associations between measures of individual and cumulative enforcement experiences and the usual sources of care and delay in care.

RESULTS: Latinx, compared with Asian respondents, reported the highest levels of enforcement experiences. Almost all individual enforcement experiences were associated with delaying care for both groups. Each additional cumulative experience was associated with a delay in care for both groups (OR=1.30, 95% CI 1.10-1.50). There were no associations with the usual source of care.

CONCLUSION: Findings confirm that Latinx immigrants experience high levels of encounters with the enforcement system and highlight new data on Asian immigrants' enforcement encounters. Direct experiences with enforcement have a negative relationship with health care access. Findings have implications for health systems to address the needs of immigrants affected by enforcement and for changes to health and immigration policy to ensure immigrants' access to care.

DOI10.1097/MLR.0000000000001839
Alternate JournalMed Care
PubMed ID36939228
PubMed Central IDPMC10079615
Grant ListR01 MD012292 / MD / NIMHD NIH HHS / United States