Geriatric Education and Research Institute Ltd., Singapore, Singapore.
Department of Geriatric Medicine, Khoo Teck Puat Hospital, Singapore, Singapore.
Front Public Health. 2023 Mar 1;11:1143640. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2023.1143640. eCollection 2023.
Stigmatisation, misinformation and discrimination have been magnified globally due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The healthcare sector was not spared from this. We conducted a transnational study, using the Health Stigma and Discrimination framework (HSDF) to explore public perception and reactions to the COVID-19 pandemic in a multicultural context. Findings from the Asian arm of the study, sited in Singapore, are reported in this paper.
This phenomenological research deployed semi-structured informant interviews using non-probability sampling approaches to recruit members of the public. Interviews were coded independently by two researchers and thematic analysis was used to analyse the responses.
Twenty-nine members of the public (23-80 years old) were interviewed between Oct 2020 to Feb 2021. Five major themes were identified: (i) perception of stigma amongst respondents, (ii) experiences of stigma amongst respondents, (iii) views on what drove stigma and misinformation, (iv) facilitators in preventing and reducing stigma and misinformation, and (v) ageist attitudes towards older adults. Overall, construction workers living in dormitories, healthcare workers, and to some extent tourists from China, were perceived to have been stigmatised and shunned by the public. Place-based stigmatisation was common; participants responded by avoiding places that had confirmed cases of COVID-19. Perceived stigma was temporary and not enduring, driven at the outset by fear of being infected. This study also identified the role played by trust in reducing stigmatisation. The relative absence of politicising of issues and high-quality information readily disseminated to the public were reported as factors that could have reduced and prevented stigma and misinformation on the various groups. Ageist attitudes were observed in some participants with older adults being labelled as vulnerable, susceptible to misinformation and being less able to cope during the pandemic.
Through the lens of the HSDF, this study provided an exploratory account of the nature of stigma that resulted from the COVID-19 pandemic in an Asian context. It also shed light on facilitators in preventing and reducing stigma during an outbreak especially the role of trust and communications during a public health crisis.
由于 COVID-19 大流行,污名化、错误信息和歧视在全球范围内加剧。医疗保健部门也未能幸免。我们进行了一项跨国研究,使用健康污名和歧视框架 (HSDF) 来探索多元文化背景下公众对 COVID-19 大流行的看法和反应。本文报告了新加坡开展的亚洲部分研究的结果。
这项现象学研究采用非概率抽样方法进行半结构化知情者访谈,招募公众成员。访谈由两名研究人员独立编码,并使用主题分析对回复进行分析。
2020 年 10 月至 2021 年 2 月期间,对 29 名公众(23-80 岁)进行了采访。确定了五个主要主题:(一)受访者对污名的看法,(二)受访者的污名经历,(三)导致污名和错误信息的看法,(四)预防和减少污名和错误信息的促进因素,以及(五)对老年人的年龄歧视态度。总体而言,被认为被公众污名化和回避的是居住在宿舍的建筑工人、医护人员,以及在一定程度上来自中国的游客。基于地点的污名化很常见;参与者的反应是避免有 COVID-19 确诊病例的地方。感知到的污名是暂时的,并非持久的,最初是由对感染的恐惧驱动的。这项研究还确定了信任在减少污名化方面的作用。将问题政治化的相对缺失以及向公众广泛传播高质量信息,被报道为可以减少和预防各种群体的污名化和错误信息的因素。在一些参与者中观察到年龄歧视态度,老年人被贴上脆弱、易受错误信息影响和在大流行期间更难应对的标签。
通过 HSDF 的视角,本研究提供了一个探索性的叙述,说明 COVID-19 大流行在亚洲背景下产生的污名的性质。它还揭示了在疫情爆发期间预防和减少污名的促进因素,尤其是在公共卫生危机期间信任和沟通的作用。