Social Research Institute, University College London, London, England, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2024 Sep 19;19(9):e0301242. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0301242. eCollection 2024.
Within the 2020/21 CICADA (Coronavirus Intersectionalities: Chronic Conditions or Disabilities and Migrants and other Ethnic minorities) study, we explored full, partial or noncompliance with government COVID-19 infection-containment measures by people from minoritised ethnic groups with a disabling health condition or impairment. We used an assets-based intersectional approach and purposive sampling, included non-disabled and White British comparators, and trained community co-researchers to help us reach undocumented migrants and asylum seekers. We undertook 271 semi-structured qualitative interviews, followed by participatory workshops with interviewees to explore data and changes in experiences five and 10 months after the interviews. Perceiving their vulnerability to COVID-19, most participants quickly and often zealously adopted infection-containment behaviours, and continued this after restrictions were lifted. This could reduce mental wellbeing, especially in community-facing cultures, and could create family conflict. Various structural inequities impeded compliance. Many, especially undocumented migrants, felt imprisoned. The intersection of gender, citizenship, socioeconomic status and culture impacted disclosures of COVID-19 infection, support seeking and use. Many were unclear what was safe as well as unsafe. People complained that disability and cultural considerations were omitted from policymaking. Participants mostly had taken the COVID-19 vaccine by October 2022, but ethnic minority participants needed time to deliberate and trusted, community-embedded information whereas White British participants were mostly influenced by mass media. The intersection of health condition or impairment, poverty, and living alone led to more non-compliance with general rules, and more vaccine hesitancy than did misinformation spread through ethnic community channels. Many participants were reluctant to reintegrate in May 2022 because of continued perceived vulnerability to COVID-19 but by September 2022 = seemed more concerned about the economic crisis. We add two new 'types' to existing compliance typologies: deliberators (who eventually decide to follow the rules), and 'necessity-driven non-compliers' who are totally unable to comply because of their disabilities.
在 2020/21 年 CICADA(冠状病毒交叉:慢性疾病或残疾与移民和其他少数民族)研究中,我们探讨了少数族裔群体中患有残疾健康状况或障碍的人以及移民和其他少数民族对政府 COVID-19 感染控制措施的完全、部分或不遵守情况。我们使用基于资产的交叉方法和有针对性的抽样,包括非残疾和白种英国人的对照组,并培训社区合作研究人员来帮助我们接触到无证移民和寻求庇护者。我们进行了 271 次半结构化定性访谈,然后与受访者一起参加参与式研讨会,以探索访谈后五个月和十个月的数据和经验变化。大多数参与者意识到自己对 COVID-19 的脆弱性,因此很快并且经常热情地采用了感染控制行为,并在限制解除后继续这样做。这可能会降低心理健康,特别是在面向社区的文化中,并且可能会引发家庭冲突。各种结构性不平等阻碍了合规性。许多人,特别是无证移民,感到被监禁。性别、公民身份、社会经济地位和文化的交叉影响了 COVID-19 感染的披露、寻求支持和使用。许多人不清楚什么是安全的,什么是不安全的。人们抱怨说,残疾和文化因素被排除在决策制定之外。大多数参与者在 2022 年 10 月之前已经接种了 COVID-19 疫苗,但少数族裔参与者需要时间进行思考,并信任社区内部的信息,而白种英国人参与者则主要受到大众媒体的影响。健康状况或障碍、贫困和独居导致更多人不遵守一般规则,并且比通过族裔社区渠道传播的错误信息更不愿意接种疫苗。许多参与者在 2022 年 5 月不愿意重新融入社会,因为他们仍然感到对 COVID-19 的脆弱性,但到 2022 年 9 月,他们似乎更担心经济危机。我们在现有的合规性分类法中增加了两种新的“类型”:深思熟虑者(最终决定遵守规则)和“因残疾而完全无法遵守的必要性驱动的不遵守者”。