Immigration in the U.S.: the importance of psychological evaluation

The growing psychological crisis in U.S. immigration and the urgency of specialized evaluations

In the final months of 2025, various studies and reports by mental health organizations have warned of the profound and persistent impact that immigration policies and border control practices have on the mental health of thousands of immigrants.

This type of psychological damage not only affects the daily well-being of individuals and families, but also has very specific legal and immigration implications: psychological evaluations are becoming key evidence in cases of asylum, waivers , U visa, T visa, ccancellation of deportation and other immigration processes. Without these evaluations, many cases are less likely to succeed.


Psychological evaluations are important in these times.

These evaluations are comprehensive reports that help immigration attorneys strengthen their clients’ cases so that they can remain in the country legally. Here’s why it’s important for your case:

  • Evidence of trauma: For many immigrants, fleeing violence, persecution, abuse, or terrible conditions involves experiences that leave psychological scars. A specialized evaluation can document this: depression, anxiety, PTSD, effects of family separation, etc.
  • Contribute to legal success: Studies show that immigration cases that include psychological evaluations have higher approval rates in processes such as asylum, U/T visas, and hardship waivers.
  • Protection against judicial or administrative errors: emotional state, ability to testify, and credibility can be affected by untreated trauma. An evaluation can help explain behaviors, memory gaps, and emotional responses that, without context, could be detrimental.
  • Comprehensive well-being of the applicant: beyond the legal case, recognizing, treating, and documenting psychological impacts is part of humane immigration justice.

Current obstacles and recent changes that aggravate the situation

  • Policies that limit access to mental health services for immigrants with irregular status or certain immigration statuses. (source: KFF)
  • Increase in asylum denials: there are more negative decisions, making psychological evidence even more vital in demonstrating the risk of returning to the country of origin. (source: The Asylumist)
  • Rumors and proposals for greater scrutiny in new requirements, such as more complex citizenship tests, social media verification, political opinions, etc. (source: Politico+1)

How a psychological evaluation can make a difference

ElementWhat a Good Evaluation Should IncludeHow to Use It in the Immigration Case
Clear Clinical History of TraumaExperiences of persecution, separation, violence, losses, torture, abuse; current symptoms of PTSD, anxiety, depression.Use it to demonstrate risk of harm if returned to the country of origin, and the need for international protection.
Current Mental StateClinical interview, symptom evaluation, functional impact (family, work, relationships).Support credibility, explain behaviors, justify that the fear is rational.
Testimonial CapacityIf trauma affects memory, communication, or emotional stability.Argue that without proper psychological support, testimonies may be misinterpreted.
Prognosis and NeedsWhat treatments the person has had, what they need, barriers to access care, future psychological risks if protection is denied.Useful in hardship waivers or to prove that returning would cause further psychological harm.

The immigration situation in the US is at a critical juncture. Recent news reports show not only increased legal pressure, but also serious consequences for the mental health of millions of people.

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