The Long-Lasting Mental Health Effects of Family Separation

Image

The Long-Lasting Mental Health Effects of Family Separation

Since the United States Department of Justice announced its “Zero Tolerance Policy for 
Criminal Illegal Entry,” over 2,000 children have been separated from their guardians. 
Affected families include both those legally seeking asylum and those illegally crossing 
the border.

In the wake of public outcry, President Trump signed an executive order that may halt the 
practice of separating immigrants from their children. “It is also the policy of this 
Administration to maintain family unity, including by detaining alien families together 
where appropriate and consistent with law and available resources,” the order said in part.

The order has drawn criticism for its failure to reunite the children who have already 
been taken from their parents. The American Psychological Association published a 
statement on June 20 about its concerns.

“While we are gratified that President Trump has ended this troubling policy of 
wresting immigrant children from their parents, we remain gravely concerned about the 
fate of the more than 2,300 children who have already been separated and are in shelters. 
These children have been needlessly traumatized and must be reunited with their parents or 
other family members as quickly as possible to minimize any long-term harm to their mental 
and physical health. In the interim, they should be assessed for and receive any needed 
mental or physical health care by qualified health care professionals.

“Decades of psychological research show that children separated from their parents 
can suffer severe psychological distress, resulting in anxiety, loss of appetite, 
sleep disturbances, withdrawal, aggressive behavior, and decline in educational achievement. 
The longer the parent and child are separated, the greater the child’s symptoms of anxiety 
and depression become,” said APA President Jessica Herndon Daniel in the statement.

The brief draws on many studies of children separated from their parents. The research 
dates back to the forced separations of World War II.

The SRCD refers to parent-child separations as a “toxic stressor.” A stressor is an event 
that activates the body’s stress management system. A toxic stressor can cause a body to 
stay on high alert for a prolonged period.

Parent-child separations also remove children’s main buffer against other stressors. Many 
of the migrants attempting to cross the border have faced trauma such as gang violence, war, 
and rape. Children who are exposed to trauma do better when they have the support of their 
parents. Family separation can worsen the child’s stress from preexisting traumas.

Much research has focused on the separation of young children from their parents. Yet older 
children suffer too. Adolescent stress is often cumulative. For example, a teen exposed to 
the stress of gang violence in childhood will suffer even more trauma when separated from 
a parent. Stress experienced in adolescence may not produce symptoms till adulthood.
			

Leave a comment