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直面差异:在新冠疫情时代,作为交叉决定因素的种族、民族和移民身份。

Confronting Disparities: Race, Ethnicity, and Immigrant Status as Intersectional Determinants in the COVID-19 Era.

机构信息

Mount St. Mary's University, Emmitsburg, MD, USA.

出版信息

Health Educ Behav. 2021 Aug;48(4):397-403. doi: 10.1177/10901981211011581. Epub 2021 May 12.

Abstract

The COVID-19 (coronavirus disease-2019) pandemic has exposed long-standing inequalities in U.S. health care. Historically, racial and ethnic minorities have been the most likely to suffer from inadequate health care access and insurance coverage. With the spread of COVID-19, these disparities have dramatically increased. Focusing on native and foreign-born racial/ethnic minorities, this article discusses how entrenched health inequities and structural discrimination have led to COVID-19 morbidities and mortalities. Considering that "essential" frontline workers are disproportionately native and foreign-born racial/ethnic minorities, this work evaluates the impact(s) of social exclusion and the lack of support systems for these workers. Using the framework of intersectionality, this work also examines how race and immigrant status affect COVID-19 spread in prisons and immigration detention centers-facilities that often lack effective health and sanitary conditions and where inmates are also likely to be racial/ethnic minorities.

摘要

新冠疫情(冠状病毒病 2019)大流行暴露了美国医疗保健中长期存在的不平等现象。从历史上看,少数族裔最有可能面临医疗保健获取和保险覆盖不足的问题。随着新冠疫情的传播,这些差距急剧扩大。本文主要关注土生土长和移民的少数族裔,讨论根深蒂固的健康不平等和结构性歧视如何导致新冠疫情的发病率和死亡率上升。考虑到“必不可少”的一线工人大部分是土生土长和移民的少数族裔,这项工作评估了社会排斥和缺乏对这些工人的支持系统的影响。利用交叉性框架,这项工作还研究了种族和移民身份如何影响监狱和移民拘留中心的新冠疫情传播——这些设施通常缺乏有效的卫生和卫生条件,囚犯也可能是少数族裔。

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