Stephen Miller on Immigration and its Effects on our National Statistics

Seymour Flops

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Very true.

It is absurd that people blindly say that "American has worse health outcomes than UHC countries," when those numbers are pushed down by immigrants. A pregnant woman crosses a river, a desert, or an ocean to come illegally to the United States and reports to an Emergency Room to have her American baby, of course she is at risk for infant mortality. That has nothing to do with the American women who work hard to provide medical insurance for themselves and have their babies in an American birthing facility.
 


Very true.

It is absurd that people blindly say that "American has worse health outcomes than UHC countries," when those numbers are pushed down by immigrants. A pregnant woman crosses a river, a desert, or an ocean to come illegally to the United States and reports to an Emergency Room to have her American baby, of course she is at risk for infant mortality. That has nothing to do with the American women who work hard to provide medical insurance for themselves and have their babies in an American birthing facility.

Nope. Try again.
No, the largest sector for U.S. infant mortality is among non-Hispanic Black mothers, who experience the highest rates compared to other racial and ethnic groups. healthsystemtracker.org Wikipedia
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The birth outcomes of undocumented women have not been systematically studied on a large scale. The growing number of undocumented women giving birth in the United States has important implications for clinical care and public health policy. The objective of this study was to describe birth outcomes of undocumented immigrants in Colorado.

Methods

Retrospective descriptive study of singleton births to 5961 undocumented women using birth certificate data for 1998–1999.

Results

Undocumented mothers were younger, less educated, and more likely to be single. They had higher rates of anemia, were less likely to gain enough weight, and less likely to receive early prenatal care. They were much less likely to use alcohol or tobacco. Undocumented women had a lower rate of low birth weight (5.3% v 6.5%, P < .001) or preterm infants (12.9% v 14.5%; p = .001). Undocumented women experienced higher rates of labor complications including excessive bleeding (2.3% v 0.8%, p < .001) and fetal distress (8.7% v 3.6%, p < .001).

Conclusion

Undocumented women have lower rates of preterm delivery and low birth weight infants, but higher rates of pregnancy related risk factors. Higher prevalence of some risk factors which are amenable to medical intervention reveals the need for improved prenatal care in this group.
 
None of those groups are illegal aliens.

So, no need to try again.
Tell you what. Those figures do not support your claim, and you have none that do. I know. I tried to find them. Post your official sources. :auiqs.jpg:
 
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