Jeffery Cheah School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Monash University Malaysia, Jalan Lagoon, Selatan Bandar Sunway, Subang Jaya, 47500, Malaysia.
Global Health. 2023 Nov 27;19(1):92. doi: 10.1186/s12992-023-00988-9.
Aligning with global evidence related to migrants and COVID-19, the pandemic highlighted and exposed long-standing structural inequities in the context of migrant populations in Malaysia who experienced a disproportionate level of exposure to SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 morbidity, as well as exacerbated precarity during COVID-19 owing to disruptions to their livelihoods, health, and life.
Focusing on COVID-19 and migrant workers in Malaysia, this review addresses two research queries: (i) what are the policy responses of the government toward migrants with regard to COVID-19? (ii) what are the lessons learned from the Malaysian experience of COVID-19 and migrants that can inform pandemic preparedness, especially regarding migrant health policy? The review used Arksey and O'Malley's methodological framework refined by Levac, Colquhoun, and O'Brien. In addition to the PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus, and EBSCO databases, and Malaysian English language newspapers, including the Malay Mail, Malaysiakini, and the New Straits Times, the search also included reports from the websites of government ministries and departments, such as the Immigration Department, Ministry of Human Resources, Ministry of Health, and the International Trade and Industry Ministry.
Using the case example of Malaysia and the policy approach toward migrant populations in Malaysia during the height of the COVID pandemic in 2020 and 2021, this paper unravels complex pathways and inter-linkages between the contexts of migration and health which coalesced to engender and exacerbate vulnerability to disease and ill-health for the migrant workers. The lack of coordination and coherence in policies addressing migrant workers during the pandemic, the normalization of cheap and disposable labor in neoliberal economic regimes, and the securitization of migration were key factors contributing to the failure of migration policies to provide protection to migrant workers during COVID-19. The review suggests that policy approaches embodying the principles of Health in All Policies, a whole-of-society approach, and the promotion of safe, just, and regular migration, predicated on equity and inclusion, are integral to a comprehensive and effective response to pandemics such as COVID-19.
与全球有关移民和 COVID-19 的证据一致,大流行凸显并暴露了马来西亚移民群体中长期存在的结构性不平等,他们面临 SARS-CoV-2 和 COVID-19 发病率不成比例的风险,并且由于生计、健康和生活受到干扰,在 COVID-19 期间脆弱性加剧。
本综述聚焦于马来西亚的 COVID-19 和移民工人,旨在回答两个研究问题:(i)政府对移民的 COVID-19 政策反应是什么?(ii)从马来西亚 COVID-19 和移民的经验中可以吸取哪些教训,为大流行的防范提供信息,特别是关于移民健康政策?本综述使用了 Arksey 和 O'Malley 的方法学框架,并由 Levac、Colquhoun 和 O'Brien 进行了改进。除了 PubMed、Web of Science、Scopus 和 EBSCO 数据库以及马来西亚英语报纸,如《马来邮报》、《马来西亚内幕》和《新海峡时报》外,该搜索还包括政府部门和机构网站的报告,如移民局、人力资源部、卫生部和国际贸易和工业部。
本文以马来西亚为例,分析了 2020 年和 2021 年 COVID 大流行期间马来西亚对移民人口的政策方法,揭示了移民和健康背景之间复杂的途径和相互联系,这些因素共同导致了移民工人易感染疾病和健康状况不佳。在大流行期间,针对移民工人的政策缺乏协调和一致性,新自由主义经济体制中廉价和一次性劳动力的常态化,以及移民的安全化,是移民政策未能在 COVID-19 期间为移民工人提供保护的关键因素。本综述表明,体现健康全纳入政策、全社会方法和促进安全、公正和有秩序移民原则的政策方法,是应对 COVID-19 等大流行的全面有效应对的组成部分。