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  • Undocumented Immigrants and Health Care Access in the United States on LinkedIn
  • Home
  • About the Project
    • Executive Summary
    • Project Overview
    • A Note on Language
    • Advisory Group
  • Analysis
    • Migrants’ Lives, Immigration Policy, and Ethics Work
    • Shocking the Conscience: Justice Department versus the Health of Immigrant Women and Children
    • Beyond Breaking News: Ways of Seeing Migrants and Their Children
    • Undocumented Immigrants and Access to Health Care in NYC
    • Health Care Access for Undocumented Immigrants Under the Trump Administration
    • Undocumented Immigrants and Access to Prenatal Care
      • Chart: Prenatal Care: State-Level Policy Provisions
      • Slideset: Access to Prenatal Care Teaching Tool
    • Undocumented Immigrants and Access to Health Care
    • Undocumented Immigrants, U.S. Health Policy and Access to Care
  • Solutions
    • Illness Experience of Undocumented Immigrants with End-Stage Renal Disease
    • Undocumented Immigrants and Access to Health Care in NYC
  • Tools
    • Searchable Database
    • Guide to State and County-Level Data and Resources
    • Knowledge is Key for Safety-Net Providers: Undocumented Patients Health-Related and Legal Rights
    • Resources for Teaching and Learning About Immigrant Health Care in Health Professions Education
  • Archived Work
    • Issue Briefs
      • Demographics and Socioeconomic Status (2012)
      • Use of Health Care (2012)
    • Web Resources (Updated 2013)
    • In the News

Undocumented Immigrants and Health Care Access in the United States

In the News

This is an archive of news and articles related to undocumented immigrants and health care from The Hastings Center’s Twitter feed.

For additional resources, please visit the searchable Selected Bibliography.

Recent Posts

  • Field Notes: Out of the Shadows
  • Press Release

Immigrant Health and the Moral Scandal of the “Public Charge” Rule

A long-anticipated policy change proposed by the Trump administration that would count the use of many federally-subsidized programs against immigrants currently eligible to use them threatens public health and would undermine ethical practice in health professions and systems. The policy would expand the definition of a public charge, someone likely to become dependent on government […]
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Beyond Breaking News: Ways of Seeing Migrants and Their Children

In his iconic 1977 essay on migration, A Seventh Man: A Book of Images and Words about the Experience of Migrant Workers in Europe, John Berger wrote: “To try to understand the experience of another it is necessary to dismantle the world as seen from one’s own place within it, and to reassemble it as […]
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Migrants’ Lives, Immigration Policy, and Ethics Work

The Russian poet Anna Akhmatova was a mother separated from her child by a state policy of terror. During the 1930s, she and other mothers would gather outside a Leningrad prison, desperate for information. One day, after 17 months of “waiting in prison queues,” another woman whispered to her, “‘Could one ever describe this?’ And […]
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Shocking the Conscience: Justice Department versus the Health of Immigrant Women and Children

In April, the U.S. Justice Department announced that it would criminally prosecute migrants who had been apprehended after crossing the U.S.-Mexico. border. An immediate consequence of this announcement, explained in detail here, is the separation of children from their parents. Rather than being allowed to stay with their children in an immigrant detention center while […]
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Undocumented Immigrants and Health Care Access in the United States

  • Home
  • About the Project
    • Executive Summary
    • Project Overview
    • A Note on Language
    • Advisory Group
  • Analysis
    • Migrants’ Lives, Immigration Policy, and Ethics Work
    • Shocking the Conscience: Justice Department versus the Health of Immigrant Women and Children
    • Beyond Breaking News: Ways of Seeing Migrants and Their Children
    • Undocumented Immigrants and Access to Health Care in NYC
    • Health Care Access for Undocumented Immigrants Under the Trump Administration
    • Undocumented Immigrants and Access to Prenatal Care
      • Chart: Prenatal Care: State-Level Policy Provisions
      • Slideset: Access to Prenatal Care Teaching Tool
    • Undocumented Immigrants and Access to Health Care
    • Undocumented Immigrants, U.S. Health Policy and Access to Care
  • Solutions
    • Illness Experience of Undocumented Immigrants with End-Stage Renal Disease
    • Undocumented Immigrants and Access to Health Care in NYC
  • Tools
    • Searchable Database
    • Guide to State and County-Level Data and Resources
    • Knowledge is Key for Safety-Net Providers: Undocumented Patients Health-Related and Legal Rights
    • Resources for Teaching and Learning About Immigrant Health Care in Health Professions Education
  • Archived Work
    • Issue Briefs
      • Demographics and Socioeconomic Status (2012)
      • Use of Health Care (2012)
    • Web Resources (Updated 2013)
    • In the News
  • Home
  • About the Project
    • Executive Summary
    • Project Overview
    • A Note on Language
    • Advisory Group
  • Analysis
    • Migrants’ Lives, Immigration Policy, and Ethics Work
    • Shocking the Conscience: Justice Department versus the Health of Immigrant Women and Children
    • Beyond Breaking News: Ways of Seeing Migrants and Their Children
    • Undocumented Immigrants and Access to Health Care in NYC
    • Health Care Access for Undocumented Immigrants Under the Trump Administration
    • Undocumented Immigrants and Access to Prenatal Care
      • Chart: Prenatal Care: State-Level Policy Provisions
      • Slideset: Access to Prenatal Care Teaching Tool
    • Undocumented Immigrants and Access to Health Care
    • Undocumented Immigrants, U.S. Health Policy and Access to Care
  • Solutions
    • Illness Experience of Undocumented Immigrants with End-Stage Renal Disease
    • Undocumented Immigrants and Access to Health Care in NYC
  • Tools
    • Searchable Database
    • Guide to State and County-Level Data and Resources
    • Knowledge is Key for Safety-Net Providers: Undocumented Patients Health-Related and Legal Rights
    • Resources for Teaching and Learning About Immigrant Health Care in Health Professions Education
  • Archived Work
    • Issue Briefs
      • Demographics and Socioeconomic Status (2012)
      • Use of Health Care (2012)
    • Web Resources (Updated 2013)
    • In the News
  • Undocumented Immigrants and Health Care Access in the United States on LinkedIn