Prose Justice is a California-based nonprofit organization committed to community-based navigation and access support for vulnerable populations affected by immigration detention.
We focus on helping immigrant families stay connected to their loved ones by eliminating logistical barriers.
Our primary program, the Immigration Detention Support Network (IDSN), ensures that families have safe, reliable transportation to detention facilities.
Clinical Justification Memo
A Trauma-Informed Health Intervention Program
The Immigration Detainee Support Network (IDSN) is a medically necessary, trauma-informed health intervention designed to mitigate psychological and physical harm caused by sudden family separation due to immigration detention. IDSN provides time-sensitive, health-justified transportation to enable family presence for individuals whose medical, behavioral health, or end-of-life conditions are adversely impacted by detention-related separation.
IDSN is not general transportation. It is also a clinical support service that addresses behavioral health crises, public health risk, and palliative care needs arising from abrupt and destabilizing family loss.
Clinical & Public Health Rationale
Sudden detention of a family member constitutes a recognized traumatic event that can precipitate or exacerbate:
Acute stress disorder
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
Major depressive episodes
Panic and anxiety disorders
Complicated grief
Suicidal ideation
For individuals with pre-existing mental health conditions, the loss of family presence is a clinical destabilizer that often results in emergency psychiatric interventions, hospitalizations, or crisis team deployment.
IDSN functions as a behavioral health stabilization intervention by enabling medically indicated family contact during a critical window of trauma.
Family separation due to detention is a public health issue, particularly for children, elderly individuals, and medically fragile populations. Research consistently shows that unresolved traumatic separation leads to:
Toxic stress and long-term neurological impact in children
Increased lifetime utilization of public behavioral health services
Higher incidence of chronic illness linked to prolonged stress
Increased involvement with child welfare and emergency systems
IDSN is a preventative public health strategy that reduces downstream costs by intervening early to prevent escalation into more intensive and expensive county services.
For individuals facing terminal illness or serious medical decline, the sudden removal of a child, spouse, or caregiver accelerates physiological deterioration and psychological distress. Family presence at end of life is a recognized palliative care standard, directly associated with:
Reduced stress response
Improved symptom management
Preservation of dignity
Ethical and humane care delivery
IDSN provides medically indicated family access in cases where detention creates a barrier to standard palliative care principles.
Medical Necessity Determination
IDSN qualifies as time-sensitive, health-related transportation because it addresses:
Behavioral health crises
Trauma stabilization needs
End-of-life care standards
Acute psychological emergencies
Delay or denial of this service results in foreseeable medical harm.
Alignment with County Health & Human Services Mandates
IDSN directly aligns with county obligations to:
Deliver trauma-informed care
Reduce preventable behavioral health crises
Support vulnerable populations
Implement cost-effective preventative interventions
Advance health equity
This program complements existing county services and reduces strain on emergency, inpatient, and crisis response systems.
County Leadership Opportunity
By adopting IDSN, counties position themselves as:
Early adopters of trauma-informed public health innovation
Leaders in humane, evidence-based behavioral health policy
Proactive stewards of public health resources
National models for addressing health harms caused by detention-related family separation
Conclusion
IDSN formalizes a reality already recognized by healthcare systems: family presence is a medical necessity in moments of trauma, crisis, and end-of-life care. This program organizes that reality into a structured, accountable, and clinically justified service.
This is healthcare.
This is urgent.
This is necessary.