{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: The Intergenerational Effects From Structural Racism Cost Our Society Greatly. {Author}: Ng'andu J;Fu C; {Journal}: Acad Pediatr {Volume}: 24 {Issue}: 5 {Year}: 2024 Jul {Factor}: 2.993 {DOI}: 10.1016/j.acap.2023.03.012 {Abstract}: Structural racism is historically rooted, and has been a foundation for United States immigration policy. This injustice has intergenerational effects that cost society greatly - with impacts on social cohesion, individual and collective health, and well-being, and ultimately our ability to function as a civil society. Limited pathways to citizenship and major restrictions to resources that promote integration have adverse consequences for immigrants and, their families. Research shows that children experience toxic stress that negatively impacts their long-term health and development from heightened immigration enforcement, regardless of any personal impact. In embracing the next generation of children, we will not succeed unless we support sound integration policies that promote the health and well-being of immigrant families across this nation. We must recognize how intricately our fates and our health are tied to each other; we all depend on immigrants being well. We must advance new a social contract, one that counters the 'othering' of immigrants" and recognizes that we must invest in the health and well-being of all families.