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Even Florida’s Naturalized Citizens Are Fearful of State’s New Anti-Immigrant Laws

March 13, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

For decades, many U.S. immigrants have received subpar health care, and asking about immigration status can make those disparities worse.
For decades, many U.S. immigrants have received subpar health care, and asking about immigration status can make those disparities worse. (Maskot via Getty Images)

By Elizabeth Aranda, Deborah Omontese, Elizabeth Vaquera, Emely Matos Pichardo and Liz Ventura

Since arriving in the United States four years ago, Alex has worked at a primary care office. He has witnessed firsthand how difficult it was for immigrants to access preventive care.

When he heard of the implementation of Florida’s Senate Bill 1718, Alex feared it would have dire consequences for the patients he served.

Alex is a pseudonym for one of our research subjects.




SB 1718, signed into law by Gov. Ron DeSantis in May 2023, imposed sweeping restrictions aimed at discouraging unauthorized immigration. Among its provisions, it requires hospitals that accept Medicaid funds to question patients about their immigration status and share data about how many immigrants they are serving within the state.

The law had several more provisions. It mandated E-Verify, a system to check employment eligibility, be used for new hires in businesses employing more than 25 employees. It also criminalized driving into Florida with an unauthorized immigrant, and restricted community organizations from issuing IDs.

After the law passed, Alex told his patients that they could refuse to divulge their legal status when asked on hospital forms. But he says his reassurances didn’t work. He watched as many immigrant patients hesitated to access necessary medical care for themselves and their children – or even left the state.

Alex had legal documentation to be in the country, but as his immigrant community shrank, he wondered if he, too, should leave Florida.

We are a group of social science professors and graduate students studying immigrant communities in Florida. We believe SB 1718 has important implications for immigrants, for Floridians and all Americans – particularly as the country faces surges in outbreaks of communicable diseases like measles and the flu.

An environment of fear

These concerns are based on our survey of 466 immigrants to Florida and adult U.S.-born children of immigrants between May and July of 2024.

Nearly two-thirds of non-U.S. citizens and one-third of U.S. citizens who responded to our survey said they hesitated to seek medical care in the year after SB 1718 passed.

“I was very sick recently and needed medical care, but I was scared,” one survey participant told us.




While hospitals cannot deny care based on a patient’s immigration status, our data shows that anticipating they would be asked deterred not only immigrants lacking permanent legal status but also those with legal status, including U.S. citizens, from seeking care.

We believe U.S. citizens are affected by spillover effects because they are members of mixed-status families.

Our survey took place during the intense 2024 presidential election season when anti-immigrant rhetoric was prevalent. The immigrants we surveyed also reported experiencing discrimination in their everyday lives, and these experiences were also associated with a reluctance to access health care.

Laws like SB 1718 amplify preexisting racial and structural inequities. Structural inequities are systemic barriers within institutions — such as health care and employment — that restrict access to essential resources based on one’s race, legal or economic status.

These kinds of laws discourage immigrants from utilizing health resources. They foster an exclusionary policy environment that heightens fears of enforcement, restricts access to essential services and exacerbates economic and social vulnerabilities. Moreover, restrictive immigration policies exclude people from accessing services based on their race. Immigrants who have been discriminated against in everyday settings may internalize the expectation that seeking care will result in further hostility – or even danger.

Consequences for public health

U.S. history holds numerous examples of racial and ethnic barriers to health care. Examples include segregation-era hospitals turning away Black patients . It also involves systemic restrictions on health care access for non-English speakers, including inadequate language assistance services, reliance on untrained interpreters and lack of culturally competent care.




President Donald Trump’s new executive orders signed in January 2025 threaten to further ostracize certain communities. For example, the order terminating federal diversity, equity and inclusion programs dismantles efforts to address racial disparities in public institutions. New restrictions on federally funded research on race and equity could hinder efforts to study and address these disparities.

Civil rights advocates believe these measures represent a systemic rollback of rights and diversity practices that generations fought to secure and could accelerate a national shift toward exclusion based on race under the guise of immigration enforcement.

A group of protestors holding signs and yelling walk down the street. Some are holding Mexican flags.
Supporters of immigrants’ rights protest against U.S. President Donald Trump’s immigration policies on Feb. 7, 2025 in Homestead, Florida.
Joe Raedle via Getty Images

The results of our survey in Florida may be a warning sign for the rest of the country. Health care hesitancy like we documented could increase the likelihood of delayed treatment, undiagnosed conditions and worsening health disparities among entire communities.

These legal restrictions are likely to increase the spread of communicable diseases and strain health care systems, increasing costs and placing a greater burden on emergency services and public health infrastructure.

Elizabeth Aranda is Professor of Sociology, Deborah Omontese and Emely Matos Pichardo are doctoral students in the Department of Sociology, Liz Ventura is a Research Associate, all at the University of South Florida, and Elizabeth Vaquera is Associate Professor of Sociology and Public Policy & Public Administration at George Washington University.

The Conversation arose out of deep-seated concerns for the fading quality of our public discourse and recognition of the vital role that academic experts could play in the public arena. Information has always been essential to democracy. It’s a societal good, like clean water. But many now find it difficult to put their trust in the media and experts who have spent years researching a topic. Instead, they listen to those who have the loudest voices. Those uninformed views are amplified by social media networks that reward those who spark outrage instead of insight or thoughtful discussion. The Conversation seeks to be part of the solution to this problem, to raise up the voices of true experts and to make their knowledge available to everyone. The Conversation publishes nightly at 9 p.m. on FlaglerLive.
See the Full Conversation Archives
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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Pogo says

    March 14, 2025 at 9:03 am

    @Fly over floriduh

    … where there is no bottom…
    https://www.google.com/search?q=fl+lower+age+buy+gun

    Yee-haw! Make me another samich and bring me a beer!

    6
  2. Skibum says

    March 18, 2025 at 10:42 pm

    This article didn’t get hardly any comments when it first appeared on FlaglerLive five days ago, and I am one who read the article but decided not to comment. I now wonder when reading the headline if it elicited nothing more than a “ho hum” response from those who do not comprehend what is happening right under our noses, in our nation’s capital as well as right here in Florida. Just today, the FL Attorney General threatened the entire city council in Fort Meyers, saying he could have govie despicable remove each one of them from office for blocking the state’s effort to have all of our local law enforcement officers “deputized” by ICE so they can reprioritize their responsibilities and begin questioning anyone the come in contact with that appears to look like someone from a foreign country. Do people not realize what this means??? Florida, of all places, has a huge segment of our state’s population that are immigrants from other countries, or children born here and citizens, who’s parents immigrated from places like Cuba, island countries in the Caribbean, or U.S. citizens who happen to be Puerto Ricans. How many U.S. citizens are out and about here in Florida and happen to have their citizenship papers, i.e. a U.S. Passport, on their person to prove who they are if stopped so they don’t get cuffed and stuffed by some local cop who thinks they look like an undocumented alien who cannot PROVE to their satisfaction they should be here in America? I would be NOT A SINGLE ONE.

    We have already seen in the media that U.S. citizens have not only been rounded up with other undocumented aliens, but have been DEPORTED even though they are U.S. citizens! Think that can’t happen to many others? If you think that, you are delusional. Shit is getting real, folks, and we ALL should be alarmed at what the occupier in the WH as well as our govie dictator are doing to this country!!!

    1
  3. FlaglerLive says

    March 19, 2025 at 11:33 am

    I’m one of those naturalized citizens, and I no longer see it as a guarantee of anything.

    2

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