As a senior faculty member at a medical school and now a residency program, I'm used to writing letters of recommendation (LOR) for students, residents, and junior faculty applying for promotions. A few years ago, I received a LOR request from a fellow (a physician who has completed residency and is pursuing specialized training) whom I'd never met before and who wasn't applying for faculty position or promotion. Instead, this foreign-born physician was applying to stay in the U.S. The reason he was asking me to support his application is that one of my papers had cited one of his research studies. As a "well-known physician and researcher in the field of Family Medicine," I could testify to the importance of his contribution to medical science in this country. He hoped to extend his visa in the EB-2 National Interest Waiver category, which requires that applicants "have an advanced degree or extraordinary ability and prove their work can significantly contribute to the US economy." I wrote the LOR, and though I did not hear back about the outcome, I recently Googled his name and was pleased to see that he was able to complete his training and is now an attending physician at a respected medical institution.
The contribution of international medical graduates (IMGs) to the U.S. physician workforce is, and has always been, substantial. My late grandfather (a neuropsychiatrist), uncle (an emergency medicine physician) and aunt (an ophthalmologist), all attended medical school in China before immigrating to the U.S. to teach and practice medicine. According to a recent article in JAMA, "there are currently more than 230,000 licensed IMGs who graduated from more than 2000 different medical schools in 169 countries." Some of these IMGs were immigrants like my relatives, while others were U.S. citizens who attended medical schools outside of the U.S. (most often in the Caribbean). Since U.S. medical school graduates tend to settle and practice in urban areas and enter higher-paying medical subspecialties, IMGs fill essential gaps in primary care and underserved rural areas - though a recent study suggested that fewer of them are choosing to do so.
This year's race for the Republican Presidential nomination, which concluded with the nomination of Donald Trump for the third election in a row, had the distinction of including two candidates who are the children of Indian immigrants: Nikki Haley and Vivek Ramaswamy. Both candidates, sensitive to the prevailing anti-immigrant sentiment in the GOP, were careful to note that their parents were "legal immigrants," presumably in contrast to the thousands of "illegals" migrating across the Mexican border. There are, of course, well-established pathways for highly educated foreign-born persons like their parents and mine to enter and remain in the U.S. That influx of talented doctors, scientists, engineers, and others is essential to maintaining America's technological preeminence.
But the U.S. doesn't just need highly educated professionals - it also needs factory laborers, construction workers, farm workers, nannies, housecleaners, and other working-class professions that don't qualify for EB-2 National Interest Waivers. Even if "mass deportation" of tens of millions of undocumented immigrants living in the U.S. was possible - and contrary to popular belief, the Biden administration expelled more migrants (2.8 million) during its first two years than Trump did during his entire 4-year term - it would result in wholesale economic disaster. What America needs isn't a way to get rid of more immigrants who are holding useful jobs and making our country better; instead, as I wrote ten years ago, it needs to create more legal pathways to citizenship that don't require a LOR from a professor of family medicine.