Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Cambridge Health Alliance, Harvard Medical School, Cambridge, MA, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2024 Aug;39(11):2051-2059. doi: 10.1007/s11606-024-08767-x. Epub 2024 May 2.
Police and security presence in healthcare settings have grown. There are few studies exploring perceptions of these law enforcement agents among US Latine immigrants, who can be vulnerable to immigration enforcement actions due to past and ongoing criminalization and anti-immigrant policies.
To explore Latine immigrants' perceptions of law enforcement in healthcare settings.
Exploratory, semi-structured qualitative interviews asked participants about their perspectives of law enforcement in healthcare settings.
English- and Spanish-speaking adult patients (n = 19) from a Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) in Los Angeles, CA, serving predominantly low-income Latine immigrants.
We used the framework method for analysis to establish a codebook and inform our thematic interpretation.
We identified three themes: (1) perceptions of safety offered by police officers are separated from the role of immigration officers; (2) perceptions of police officers are integrated into broader perceptions of the healthcare system; and (3) lived experiences, including immigration status, influenced valence response to officer uniforms and perceptions of officers. Most participants viewed police officers positively as maintaining order and safety, separating them from federal immigration enforcement actions, and reflecting on local, state, and organizational "sanctuary" or immigrant-friendly policies. Individuals with precarious immigration status more often saw officers as intimidating. Immigration enforcement remained a key concern.
Differentiating police and security roles from immigration enforcement in healthcare could improve Latine immigrant trust and access. Future studies should explore perspectives of Latine immigrants in localities without sanctuary laws or organizational immigrant-friendly policies.
警察和安全人员在医疗场所的存在有所增加。很少有研究探讨美国拉丁裔移民对这些执法人员的看法,由于过去和正在进行的刑事定罪和反移民政策,他们可能容易受到移民执法行动的影响。
探讨拉丁裔移民对医疗环境中执法的看法。
探索性、半结构式定性访谈要求参与者对医疗环境中的执法人员发表看法。
来自加利福尼亚州洛杉矶 FQHC 的讲英语和西班牙语的成年患者(n = 19),该 FQHC 主要为低收入拉丁裔移民服务。
我们使用框架方法进行分析,以建立代码簿并为我们的主题解释提供信息。
我们确定了三个主题:(1)警察提供的安全感与移民官员的角色分开;(2)对警察的看法融入了对医疗保健系统的更广泛看法;(3)生活经历,包括移民身份,影响了对警察制服和对警察的看法的积极反应。大多数参与者积极看待警察维护秩序和安全,将他们与联邦移民执法行动分开,并反映当地、州和组织的“庇护”或移民友好政策。那些移民身份不稳定的人更多地将警察视为威胁。移民执法仍然是一个关键问题。
在医疗保健中区分警察和安全人员与移民执法的角色可以提高拉丁裔移民的信任度和获得医疗服务的机会。未来的研究应探讨在没有庇护法或组织友好移民政策的地方拉丁裔移民的观点。