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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp017h149s90j
Title: Children in Crisis: Trauma Exposure and Mental Health Outcomes Among Central American and Mexican Children Held in Immigration Detention at the United States-Mexico Border
Authors: Sidamon-Eristoff, Anne Elizabeth
Advisors: Guerrero, Javier
Peña, Catherine J
Department: Spanish and Portuguese
Certificate Program: Neuroscience Program
Class Year: 2020
Abstract: The current study sought to explore the associations between migration-related stress and the mental health of migrant children coming from Central America and Mexico who were held in United States immigration detention facilities during the summer of 2019. Increasing numbers of family units have been migrating to the United States since 2014, with an especially steep increase in 2019. Migration is a complex and inherently stressful experience that is known to confer risk for development of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other psychiatric disorders. Increasing amounts of time in immigration detention is shown in other populations to exacerbate this effect. Due to heightened plasticity of the developing brain, children and adolescents are at higher risk for the impact migration-related trauma can have on their mental health. Shifts in United States immigration policy in 2018 led to increases in the separation of migrant children from their parents upon entry into the United States. Growing evidence across species suggests that caregivers play a central role in moderating the effects of traumatic stress on children’s brain development and physiological responsivity to stress, including buffering children from the detrimental neurobiological effects of stress. We hypothesized that children’s separation from parents and/or length of detention would exacerbate the effect of migration stress on psychiatric outcomes, specifically the presence and severity of PTSD. We conducted 65 interviews with monolingual Spanish-speaking parents of 84 migrant children (ages 1-17) originating from Honduras (n = 37), El Salvador (n = 20), Mexico (n = 9), Guatemala (n = 8), and Nicaragua (n = 2), countries comprising one of the most dangerous regions in the world. Interviews were conducted in shelters within 1-2 days after families were released from detention facilities in Texas. A modified version of the UCLA Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Reaction Index (UCLA PTSD RI) was administered to assess for trauma exposure that occurred before, during, and after migration, and a semi-structured interview was conducted to assess family demographics and children’s migration- and detention-related experiences. Regression analyses controlling for child age revealed a significant interaction between children’s pre-migration trauma, length of detention, and whether a child was separated from their parent(s) during detention predicting children’s PTSD symptom severity. Results underscore the negative effects of immigration detention on Central American and Mexican children’s mental health outcomes and suggest that high pre-migration trauma exposure may make children more vulnerable to the effects of migration-related stress on mental health outcomes. Results of this study must be considered in context of a number of limitations, including small sample size, especially of children who experienced separation, and the inability to clinically diagnose PTSD. Nevertheless, results suggest that amending immigration policy to reduce detention length, end family separations, and improve quality of life in detention would lessen the negative effects of immigration detention on Central American and Mexican children’s mental health outcomes.
URI: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp017h149s90j
Access Restrictions: Walk-in Access. This thesis can only be viewed on computer terminals at the Mudd Manuscript Library.
Type of Material: Princeton University Senior Theses
Language: en
Appears in Collections:Spanish and Portuguese, 2002-2023

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