Strengthening Medical and Mental Health
Services for Unaccompanied Children in U.S. Communities

 
 
 
 

MONDAY, APRIL 24, 2023
3:00 P.M. ET (DC, New York) / 2:00 P.M. CT (Houston, New Orleans) / 12:00 P.M. PT (Los Angeles)


SPEAKERS:

Jonathan Beier, PhD, Policy Analyst, National Center on Immigrant Integration Policy, Migration Policy Institute (MPI); developmental psychologist

Karla Fredricks, MD, MPH, FAAP, Immigration Fellow, American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP); Director, Program for Immigrant and Refugee Child Health, Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Children’s Hospital

Courtney Mosley, MSW, Opportunities for Youth Project Manager, Esperanza Immigrant Rights Project, Catholic Charities of Los Angeles, Inc.

MODERATOR:

Tamar Magarik Haro, Senior Director, Federal and State Advocacy, AAP

LOCATION
MPI & AAP WEBCAST

The number of migrant children entering the United States without a parent or legal guardian reached a record high last year. Most unaccompanied children temporarily enter the care of the U.S. government before joining parents or other sponsors in U.S. communities to await the outcome of their immigration proceedings. Once they have made this transition, the services and supports that are critical to their ability to thrive—medical and mental health care key among them—can be difficult to access. This 60-minute conversation marks the conclusion of a research project undertaken in 2022 by the Migration Policy Institute (MPI) and the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) to study unaccompanied children’s access to medical and mental health services after release from federal custody.

AAP and MPI will launch their report, A Path to Meeting the Medical and Mental Health Needs of Unaccompanied Children in U.S. Communities, and discuss its findings and recommendations during this webinar, including insights from field visits in Houston, Los Angeles, and New Orleans, where researchers spoke with more than 100 professionals working with unaccompanied children. The conversation will feature a walk-through of the report’s findings around barriers to care for unaccompanied children and promising community practices to strengthen medical and mental health services. It also will focus on the report’s recommendations on steps that governments, health systems, schools, and communities can take to improve access to medical and mental health care, for the benefit of the children and broader society.

 

For more information
[email protected]
202-266-1929
www.migrationpolicy.org

Follow Us

Migration Policy Institute
1275 K St. NW 
Suite 800
Washington, District of Columbia 
xxxxxx

Unsubscribe or Manage Your Preferences