Responding to structural inequities: Coping strategies among immigrant women during COVID-19

被引:1
|
作者
Abularrage, Tara F. [1 ,6 ]
Wurtz, Heather M. [2 ,3 ,4 ]
Samari, Goleen [1 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Columbia Univ, Heilbrunn Dept Populat & Family Hlth, Mailman Sch Publ Hlth, New York, NY USA
[2] Univ Connecticut, Anthropol Dept, Storrs, CT USA
[3] Univ Connecticut, Human Rights Inst, Res Program Global Hlth & Human Rights, Storrs, CT USA
[4] Brown Univ, Populat Studies & Training Ctr, Providence, RI USA
[5] Univ Southern Calif, Dept Populat & Publ Hlth Sci, Los Angeles, CA USA
[6] 60 Haven Ave,Suite B2 212, New York, NY 10032 USA
来源
SSM-MENTAL HEALTH | 2024年 / 5卷
关键词
Immigrants; Structural racism; Coping; Structural inequities; COVID-19; Gender; CROSS-BORDER TIES; HEALTH; RESILIENCE; STRESS; RISK; VULNERABILITY;
D O I
10.1016/j.ssmmh.2023.100293
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Examining coping strategies and resilience among immigrant communities reflects a commitment to working with immigrant communities to understand their needs while also identifying and building upon their strengths. In the United States, the physical, emotional, and economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic intersected with existing structural inequities to produce distinct challenges and stressors related to the pandemic, immigration, caregiving responsibilities, and structural xenophobia. Leveraging an understanding of the multilevel effects of stress, this qualitative study explores individual, interpersonal, and community-level coping strategies immigrant women used to respond to, alleviate, or reduce distress related to these compounding stressors. Using semistructured in-depth interviews conducted in 2020 and 2021 with 44 first- and second-generation cisgender immigrant women from different national origins and 19 direct service providers serving immigrant communities in New York City, data were coded and analyzed using a constant comparative approach. Four central themes were identified: caregiving as a source of strength, leveraging resources, social connections, and community support. While women described a range of coping strategies they used to manage stressors and challenges, perspectives from direct service providers also connect these coping strategies to the harm-generating institutions, policies, and structures that produce and uphold structural oppression and inequities. Accounts from service providers point to the detrimental long-term effects of prolonged coping, underscoring a duality between resilience and vulnerability. Exploring the coping strategies cisgender immigrant women used to ease distress and promote resilience during a period of heightened structural vulnerability is critical to centering the experiences of immigrant women while simultaneously directing attention towards addressing the fundamental causes of cumulative disadvantage and the systems and structures through which it is transmitted.
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页数:11
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