Daly Felicity, O'Riordan Jacqui
Assistant Professor Global Health (2023 - Present), Trinity Centre for Global Health, Trinity College Dublin, the University of Dublin, 7-9 Leinster Street South, Dublin D02 K104, Ireland.
Postdoctoral Researcher (2020-2033), Institute for Social Science in the 21st Century (ISS21), University College Cork, Top Floor Carrigbawn Building, Donovan Road, Cork T12 YE30, Ireland.
J Migr Health. 2024 Jul 25;10:100255. doi: 10.1016/j.jmh.2024.100255. eCollection 2024.
Responding to the need for qualitative research that reveals the lived reality of how forced migrants endured the COVID-19 pandemic this paper presents findings from eleven interviews with asylum seekers residing in Ireland's Direct Provision (DP) accommodation system that detail care deficits before, during and after COVID-19 along with analysis of how care is discussed within Irish policy documents concerned with the health and wellbeing of asylum seekers. The research contributes personal testimony and documentary evidence of the inability of DP to properly adapt to the pandemic and its failure to protect the health and wellbeing of asylum seekers given pre-existing care deficits. The paper argues that an ethic of care practiced for and with asylum seekers must ensure they are not re-traumatised, and their health disparities are not exacerbated during public health crises and beyond. The findings are relevant to efforts to reform how international protection responsibilities are enacted in Ireland and other destinations of forced migrants, including EU member states.
为回应开展定性研究的需求,该研究揭示了被迫移民如何在新冠疫情中艰难求生的现实生活状况。本文呈现了对居住在爱尔兰直接提供(DP)住宿系统中的寻求庇护者进行的11次访谈结果,详细阐述了新冠疫情之前、期间和之后的护理不足情况,并分析了在与寻求庇护者健康和福祉相关的爱尔兰政策文件中如何讨论护理问题。该研究提供了个人证词和文献证据,证明直接提供系统无法妥善应对疫情,且由于先前存在的护理不足,未能保护寻求庇护者的健康和福祉。本文认为,为寻求庇护者践行并与他们共同践行的护理伦理必须确保他们不会再次受到创伤,且在公共卫生危机期间及之后,他们的健康差距不会加剧。这些研究结果与爱尔兰及包括欧盟成员国在内的其他被迫移民目的地如何改革国际保护责任的努力相关。