
A Mexican girl is at risk of losing access to the lifesaving treatment she has been receiving in Los Angeles after her family's legal immigration status was abruptly revoked. Limited time: Save 25% on NBC News subscription Get exclusive reporting, live Q&As and ad-free reading. Her family is now fighting to have their status reinstated.
Main Idea: A 4-year-old girl may lose life-saving care in Los Angeles after the Department of Homeland Security revoked her family’s legal immigration status.
Key Points:
If DHS revokes parole, a child could lose life-saving care and the family could face removal, showing how immigration policy can disrupt patients and strain hospitals.
USCIS review could keep the family in the US and let Childrens Hospital in Los Angeles continue treatment,.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Federal agency that terminated the family's humanitarian parole and work authorization, driving the article’s central conflict.
Major treatment center providing the child's specialized care and central to the risk if parole ends.
The girl's mother and a central quoted family member fighting to restore legal status and preserve her daughter’s.
Attorney for the family who is a key speaker explaining the legal challenge and DHS notice.
Federal agency handling the family's new humanitarian parole application and part of the legal response.
The mobile app referenced in DHS’s self-deportation notice and part of the immigration process discussed.
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