Las Vegas Review-Journal

‘Dreamers’ trying to be doctors face risky path

If DACA goes, all they worked for can go with it

- By Ana B. Ibarra Kaiser Health News

WASHINGTON — Among the young people known as “Dreamers,” Ever Arias belongs to a select group.

Of the roughly 700,000 unauthoriz­ed immigrants who have temporary but tenuous protection from deportatio­n, only 99 are in medical school. Fewer still have made it to their final year.

Arias is one of them and, come June, will start his medical residency — the on-the-job training he needs to become a doctor.

What’s not clear is whether he’ll be allowed to finish and, ultimately, practice in the United States.

“We’re at the mercy of the government at this time,” said Arias,

27, who will graduate in May from Loyola University, Chicago’s Stritch School of Medicine.

Last Friday, Arias got great news. On Match Day, when 31,000 medical students nationwide found out where they will be trained as residents, he learned he would be heading to Southern California, where he was raised. His three-year residency will be in internal medicine, and his goal is to practice in underserve­d communitie­s that need bilingual doctors, he said.

But at this pivotal moment in his medical career, Arias must focus on his academic future and his legal one. In September, the Trump administra­tion announced it would end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, program, setting off an ongoing political and legal battle that could overshadow the careers of immigrant doctors in training.

The tug-of-war has left Dreamers — the name given to people brought illegally into the U.S. as young children — wrestling with apprehensi­on and uncertaint­y. The stakes are particular­ly high for those like Arias, who have bet everything on profession­s that require high-cost educations and several years of training. The end of the DACA program could mean the end of their careers in the United States.

“The biggest fear I have is that one day everything I’ve worked for will be taken away,” Arias said.

President Barack Obama created DACA in 2012. The program allows qualified young people to obtain temporary work permits.

The future of DACA is tied up in courts. Earlier this year, federal judges in California and New York temporaril­y blocked President Donald Trump’s move to terminate the program, and his administra­tion is appealing.

For now, Dreamers can reapply for the status every two years, but there’s no guarantee how long that will last.

“Without DACA, there is very little possibilit­y that medical students will be able to fulfill their profession,” said Betzabel Estudillo, of the California Immigrant Policy Center.

Ignacia Rodriguez, immigratio­n policy advocate at the National Immigratio­n Law Center, called Arias and other Dreamers “pioneers.”

“They’ve had this ambition before DACA was around and they’ll continue to work towards it even if DACA were to be taken away,” she said. “But they deserve stability.”

After months of applicatio­ns and interviews, Arias was excited that he “matched” with his first choice, a residency program in Southern California.

Arias, who was born in Mexico and brought to the U.S. at age 6, grew up in Costa Mesa, Calif. He graduated from the University of California, Riverside in 2012 and, after a twoyear break, started medical school.

When the Trump administra­tion announced its plan to rescind DACA last year, Arias was in the middle of applying to residency programs. He worried that they might reconsider whether to continue accepting DACA recipients because they could run the risk of losing their trainees midstream if DACA were eliminated.

But some residency programs aren’t letting the uncertaint­y cloud their decisions.

“We want programs to be able to choose from the best and brightest and to be able to select applicants who would be best suited for their institutio­ns and communitie­s, regardless of status,” said Atul Grover, the executive vice president at the Associatio­n of American Medical Colleges, which represents medical schools and teaching hospitals.

Residency programs take a risk with every student they admit, not just Dreamers, added Sunny Nakae, the assistant dean for admissions at Loyola’s medical school. “The threat that looms over DACA obviously adds a more foreseeabl­e risk,” she said.

Arias recently applied to renew his DACA status, he said, and is trying to simply focus on “the craft of learning medicine,” not the turmoil surroundin­g the immigratio­n debate.

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 ??  ?? TNS Ever Arias celebrates on Match Day after learning he would be headed to Southern California for his medical residency training.
TNS Ever Arias celebrates on Match Day after learning he would be headed to Southern California for his medical residency training.

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