The Decision to Emigrate
The context of departure shapes the decision, process, and nature of the exit of the country of origin (
19). Country-of-origin sociopolitical characteristics have a great impact on the reasons and conditions of exit and arrival of migrants. When the decision to emigrate is driven by life-threatening risks, immigrants may arrive in the United States or other host country with a more compromised mental health status. For instance, anxiety prevalence and depression rates among refugees are almost double the rates among individuals who migrate for economic reasons (
45). The cultural match between the immigrant’s country of origin and the United States may hinder or facilitate his or her incorporation into American society.
Migrants move to the United States for different reasons and under diverse conditions, and their migration decision is not always voluntary. Voluntary international migrants are those who relocate because of reasons under their control. Examples include individuals who decide to pursue new career opportunities in a different country or move to relocate with family members. Forced international migrants are those who need to relocate to a different country for decisions beyond their control. People may migrate to the United States because of war or because they belong to persecuted groups such as sexual or religious minorities. Coerced migrants, such as victims of human trafficking, constitute a third category of international migrants. Initially, these individuals may have sought to migrate, but the circumstances of their migration fell beyond their control. Finally, children and elderly persons are other groups who migrate internationally, but their control over the decisions regarding migration may be limited. Although the majority of children either migrate with or reunite with family members, increasing numbers do so on their own. Examples include children who migrate to the United States alone to attend school (
46) or unaccompanied minors who cross international borders (
47).
The Journey to the United States
The process by which immigrants move from one country to another may be direct or may occur in stages. Today, the duration and strenuousness of the voyage are determined in part by the immigrant’s level of education and economic resources. In general, poorer migrants with less education take longer to complete the trip from their country of origin to their destination, and sometimes their journey takes them through several countries before they arrive in the United States. One example entails Chinese immigrants who arrive in the United States by crossing the border with Mexico (
48). Sometimes this process can take months and even years. As border crossings became more difficult because of increased surveillance, the risks that unauthorized immigrants take and the price they pay have also increased. Unauthorized migrants often enter the country under extremely stressful circumstances and are regularly victimized by traffickers. For instance, Amnesty International (
49) reported that six of ten girls and women crossing the Mexican border are sexually assaulted or raped. In addition, many immigrants arrive in the United States owing large sums of money to the “coyotes” or “snakeheads” who helped them migrate. The well-being of the immigrant’s family depends on his or her ability to honor these debts. Traumatic migration experiences are not unique to undocumented migrants, because some authorized immigrants often arrive in America after stressful periods in refugee camps or during civil wars, or they endure traumatic separations from their loved ones before initiating their journey to the United States.
Family members often migrate to the United States in stages, a process that has been referred to as “serial migration” (
50). The separation of parents and children can be quite extended (
51). The family configurations and dynamics must adjust to this transnational experience in which members are physically absent but emotionally present. In these families, contact between biological parents and children may be regular or sporadic, but in general, parents lack the ability to provide supervision to the children left behind. Parents separated from their children and unable to reunite because of their immigration status may experience guilt, worry, sadness, and powerlessness. In many cases, children with migrant parents, who are left under the care of relatives or friends, endure emotional hardship as well as physical and sexual abuse. In others, the emotional ties that bind parents and children fade, and new ones are forged with the temporary caregivers. Whatever the case, family reunifications can be very challenging (
52).
Starting a Life in the United States
Immigrants from rural backgrounds encounter multiple barriers in their process of adaptation to the United States. Some of these barriers are rooted in the country’s immigration policy, which has prioritized the legal incorporation of educated and urban migrants while neglecting agricultural and less educated workers and their families. Farm workers and their families face many stressors related to the physical environment (e.g., exposure to pesticides) and the economic difficulties and uncertainties associated with farming (e.g., lack of work during droughts). In addition, children of rural immigrant families are often recruited into farm work at an early age and have limited access to educational opportunities. When immigrants from rural backgrounds choose to settle in postindustrial urban areas, they may encounter serious obstacles in their adaptation due to their lack of education and urban social capital. These stressors can pose detrimental effects on the mental health of this group of immigrants.
Immigrants face different contexts of incorporation relevant to their mental health. Although the importance of immigrants for the U.S. economy is undoubted, the country’s approach to the incorporation of immigrants has varied over time. These variations resulted from changing geopolitical, economic, and social factors that influenced domestic and foreign policies. Governmental policies are important in determining the incorporation patterns of arriving immigrants (
53) because immigrants encountering exclusionary policies endure greater structural and economic restrictions as well as a general disadvantage. For instance, immigrants arriving in the United States from Muslim countries face greater discrimination than those from Western European countries, which may affect their sense of well-being and acculturation.
Legal status is a common concern for immigrants in the United States. The term
legal or
documented applies to individuals who have acquired legal rights and protections through birth in the United States (resulting in full citizenship) or through federal immigration (
54). Authorized immigration to the United States happens through obtaining a visa (e.g., employment, student, or work visas), refugee status, resident alien status, or naturalization. The term
undocumented (we use
undocumented and
unauthorized interchangeably in this article) refers to immigrants who are in the United States without federal government authorization, also known as
illegal (
54). Immigrant families are often “mixed-status” family units in which some members, often children born in the country, are U.S. citizens, whereas others are undocumented immigrants or have some legal status that could ultimately allow them to access U.S. citizenship (i.e., refugee, legal resident) (
55). Approximately four in ten second-generation Latino children have at least one undocumented immigrant parent and hence live in a mixed-status family (
56). The growing number of deportations of unauthorized immigrants, many of them parents of U.S. citizen children who in many cases are left behind, requires that mental health professionals become prepared to work with this population (
57). Research has shown that undocumented Latino immigrants’ fear of deportation heightens their risk of experiencing negative emotional states, particularly anger (
58).
Once they are in the United States, newly arrived immigrants must compete with others, including U.S. workers, for jobs. Legal immigrants, including those with professional visas or those admitted for family reunification processes, may be able to access the formal wage market. As part of the process of reception and placement, adult refugees are given employment assistance, thus easing their transition into the workforce. Undocumented immigrants depend greatly on their social networks to obtain employment and often do so in the informal economy. Depending on their educational background and skills, command of the English language, professional credentials, and social capital, immigrants’ insertion in the market may be more or less challenging. Professional immigrants with work visas or those who lack legal authorization to work may be more vulnerable to exploitation and abuse by employers, because their opportunities to obtain employment are limited. Many immigrants must insert themselves into the labor economy by taking jobs that may, even with better pay, carry less social recognition than the jobs they performed in their country of origin. Medical doctors may start again as residents or even as health educators, and police officers may have to work as landscapers. This may pose special challenges for the well-being of immigrants whose sense of identity is closely tied to their professional role. Men who are used to being the sole providers for their families may learn that their low-wage work is not enough to support their spouses and children, threatening their self-esteem.
Family issues.
Because immigrant families in the lower socioeconomic status strata often cannot survive on one low-wage income in the United States, women may seek employment to help support the family. Women may find it easier than men to get jobs in the service economy. Their entry in the workforce, especially among immigrants from countries with lesser opportunities for education and employment for women, can change family and gender dynamics (
59) and bring about serious interpersonal and marital stressors. Furthermore, as with many American women who juggle work and families, immigrant women may struggle with caring for their children and spouses while working. In more traditional and less acculturated immigrant homes, men may not be expected to help with child rearing and household tasks, thus further burdening women who work. Working, however, can also foster a sense of empowerment through building women’s social and human capital, thus facilitating their acculturation.
Just as adult immigrants need to insert themselves into the labor market, children have to negotiate the educational system. Supportive learning environments are not always available for immigrant children, and some of these children face discrimination and lack of opportunities at school. The effect of the school experience on academic outcomes is well documented. For instance, perceived discrimination at school has been linked with poorer academic outcomes among Mexican immigrant children (
60). In addition, psychiatrists should be attuned to the behavioral manifestations of the children’s experience at school and beware of confusing such behavior with pathology. For example, some young children entering a school environment with no knowledge of English often go through a nonverbal period in their second language that should not be confused with selective mutism (
61).
Elderly adults often immigrate to the United States as part of family reunification–either legally or as unauthorized immigrants. Sometimes they join the family to help care for younger children while the parents work outside the home. Although some elderly migrants could feel isolated if they left behind family and friends, others could feel empowered by their caregiver roles. Older adults may have a harder time adjusting to the new environments, learning the new language, and building social networks. Sometimes, their acculturation issues can be confused with cognitive decline (e.g., the case of an older adult who may get lost navigating his or her new neighborhood and may not know the language to ask for help).
Fellow immigrants and assimilation.
Another important aspect of the context of reception has to do with the proportion of coethnics among neighbors, coworkers, classmates, and so forth. Many immigrants with low socioeconomic status arrive in the country through personal networks and initially settle with family members or coethnics. Their opportunities for work are also organized within networks of coethnics, which in turn build reciprocity and support. These networks are critical for the well-being of immigrants (
62,
63); they not only provide support, but they also help newcomers in the process of adjusting to the United States. As time passes, some immigrants become successful and move to areas with fewer coethnics, whereas others continue to struggle and face limited opportunities for social mobility. Research suggests that large numbers of immigrants downwardly assimilate, a phenomenon called segmented assimilation (
64). This assimilation pattern exposes them to many risk factors for negative health and mental health outcomes such as poverty, a dearth of educational and occupational opportunities, inadequate health care, and discrimination.
Implications for Clinical Practice
Clinicians should collect a comprehensive narrative of the patient’s migration trajectory, including reasons for migration, conditions of exit and arrival, and exposure to stressful events before, during, and after migration. Psychiatrists could explore not only what prompted the migration but also whether the patient’s expectations for settlement in the United States were fulfilled. In addition, clinicians could ask how the process of migration affected the patient’s emotional well-being, his or her social network, and the quality of his or her relationships. Disruptions in social networks, along with changes in family dynamics, should be the focus of attention during services.
It is important to explore family immigration processes, as well as transnational family experiences and the meaning patients give to these experiences. Clinicians should explore the conditions of separation and—if separation has occurred—reunification. Special attention must be given to parents separated from minors and to children and teens reunited with their parents after a period of extended separations. Supportive services and culturally competent family therapy could ease the conflicts emerging during family separations and reunification and could reduce the mood and behavioral symptoms resulting from these conflicts.
Mental health professionals cannot ignore immigration law. Psychiatrists ought to be sensitive to the patient’s immigrant status and how it affects his or her mental health. In addition, some undocumented patients may fear that being diagnosed with a psychiatric disorder could carry negative effects on their future ability to secure legal immigrant status. Thus, psychiatrists need to stress issues of confidentiality in the delivery of mental health services. Clinicians serving this population could become aware of local nonprofit groups that provide legal counsel when needed and identify who may benefit from immigration assistance. For instance, undocumented women in abusive relationships may qualify for domestic violence asylum in the United States, and many domestic violence service agencies have immigration lawyers on staff. Psychiatrists may explore the legal status of all members of an immigrant family and, when needed, assist families in the process of separation due to deportation. Mental health professionals are increasingly acting as expert witnesses in immigration courts on behalf of developmentally disabled or mentally ill U.S. citizen children whose caregivers are in the process of being deported. Their advocacy aims at curbing the deportation process and securing opportunities for families to remain united so that children can receive the services they need.
Mental Health Services and Implications for Clinical Practice
Cultural and contextual variables affect immigrants’ help-seeking pathways. The choice of treatment provider is strongly influenced by culture, whereas the opportunities to meet those providers are shaped by contextual factors. For instance, some immigrants may approach ethnic healers (e.g.,
curanderos) or spiritual leaders (e.g., Imams) instead of seeking the assistance of a psychiatrist (
65). Others who may be engaged in psychiatric treatment may complement those services with spiritual or folk practices (
66).
On the contextual side, immigrants experience many barriers to accessing psychiatric services. Immigrants often have low levels of income and health literacy, and their work schedules preclude them from attending appointments. Compounded with these barriers, there is a shortage of mental health services and multicultural providers. Health insurance is not available for undocumented immigrants.
The age of the immigrants may also affect their access and use of mental health services, because psychiatrists are more likely to see immigrant children than adults. This is because immigrant children attend school; in this context, these children interact with teachers and others who are familiar with American ideologies of mental health. If the child is referred for services, the psychiatrists may meet caregivers who do not assess the child’s behaviors as pathological or may not understand the nature of psychiatric services.
Practitioners must be aware of the challenges faced by immigrant patients to access services and they must generate opportunities to reach these individuals outside traditional mental health settings. For instance, psychiatrists could partner with ethnic community centers or religious organizations to educate immigrants about mental health. Accessing services despite challenging barriers is a marker of resilience and positive prognosis among immigrant patients.