The Trump administration has quietly reversed a policy that threatened the jobs and immigration status of thousands of foreign doctors working in the United States.
Doctors from countries impacted by the administration’s expanded travel ban will once again be allowed to continue processing visa applications, work permits, and green card cases.
Earlier this year, the Department of Homeland Security implemented a freeze on immigration benefits for nationals from 39 countries. The policy placed many foreign physicians in legal limbo, forcing some hospitals to place doctors on administrative leave while others faced the possibility of losing their ability to work entirely.
The administration has now confirmed that applications associated with medical physicians will continue processing, exempting doctors from the immigration freeze. The change was made quietly, without a formal public announcement.
The update appeared on the USCIS webpage outlining its enhanced screening and vetting procedures which now indicates doctors are no longer subject to adjudicative processing holds:
“Internal Review Process
USCIS established an internal process for lifting holds on individual or group cases, requiring comprehensive review by multiple offices. Holds have been lifted for aliens vetted through Operation PARRIS, certain petitions filed by U.S. citizens, intercountry adoption forms, certain rescheduled oath ceremonies, statutory and regulatory decision issuance, refugee registrations for South African citizens/nationals, certain special immigrant visa petitions, certain employment authorization documents, and asylum applications from non high-risk countries, and applications associated with medical physicians….”
The reversal comes amid growing concerns about physician shortages across the United States. The country is currently facing a shortage of approximately 65,000 doctors, a number expected to increase significantly in the coming years as the population ages and more physicians retire. Foreign doctors make up roughly 25% of all doctors in the United States, with many serving in primary care and federally designated underserved communities.
More than 20 physician associations urged the administration to create a national-interest exemption for international doctors, warning that hospitals and vulnerable communities could face serious disruptions in care.
The policy had already affected many physicians personally and professionally. Some doctors from Africa, the Middle East, and Venezuela reportedly lost work authorization or faced detention due to delayed visa processing. Advocacy groups estimated that nearly 1,000 doctors completing medical residencies and fellowships this year were at risk of losing placements in underserved areas.
While the exemption offers relief to many physicians and healthcare employers, uncertainty surrounding travel bans and visa processing has created long-term instability for hospitals that rely on foreign medical graduates.
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