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新冠疫情期间不利因素与歧视的交叉影响及其对日常生活的作用:CICADA-ME混合方法研究

Intersecting factors of disadvantage and discrimination and their effect on daily life during the coronavirus pandemic: the CICADA-ME mixed-methods study.

作者信息

Rivas Carol, Moore Amanda P, Thomson Alison, Anand Kusha, Lal Zainab Zuzer, Wu Alison Fang-Wei, Aksoy Ozan

机构信息

UCL Social Research Institute, University College London (UCL), London, UK.

Wolfson Institute, Queen Mary University of London, London, UK.

出版信息

Health Soc Care Deliv Res. 2025 Feb;13(2):1-185. doi: 10.3310/KYTF4381.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated pre-existing societal inequities. Our study addresses the dearth of studies on how intersecting factors of disadvantage and discrimination affected pandemic daily life for disabled people from minoritised ethnic groups, aiming to improve their experiences and social, health and well-being outcomes.

OBJECTIVES

Through an intersectionality lens, to: explore and compare, by location and time, survey and qualitative data on changing needs for social, health and well-being outcomes relate coping strategies/solutions to these explore formal and informal network issues/affordances gain insights from synthesising our data contextualise and explore transferability of findings co-create outputs with stakeholders.

DESIGN

Mixed-methods, asset-based, underpinned by embodiment disability models and intersectionality, integrating three strands: (secondary): analysis of existing cohort/panel data, literature review (primary: quantitative): new survey ( = 4326), three times over 18 months (primary: qualitative): semistructured interviews ( = 271), interviewee co-create workshops ( = 104) 5 and 10 months later, mixed stakeholder co-design workshops ( = 30) for rapid-impact solutions to issues, key informant interviews ( = 4).

SETTING

United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland.

PARTICIPANTS

Strand 2: community-dwelling migrants, White British comparators, with/without disability. Strand 3: focus on Arab, South Asian, African, Central/East European, or White British heritage with/without disability.

RESULTS

We found strong adherence to pandemic restrictions (where accommodation, economic situations and disability allowed) due to COVID-19 vulnerabilities. High vaccine hesitancy (despite eventual uptake) resulted from side-effect concerns and (mis)trust in the government. Many relied on food banks, local organisations, communities and informal networks. Pandemic-related income loss was common, particularly affecting undocumented migrants. Participants reported a crisis in mental health care, non-holistic social and housing care, and inaccessible, poor-quality and discriminatory remote health/social care. They preferred private care (which they could not easily afford), community or self-help online support. Lower socioeconomic status, mental health and mobility issues reduced well-being. Individual and community assets and coping strategies mitigated some issues, adapted over different pandemic phases, and focused on empowerment, self-reflection, self-care and social connectivity. Technology needs cut across these.

LIMITATIONS

We could not explore area-level social distancing and infection rates. Data collection was largely online, possibly excluding some older, digitally deprived or more disabled participants. Participants engaged differently in online and face-to-face co-create workshops. Our qualitative data over-represent England and South Asian people and use contestable categories.

CONCLUSIONS

Different intersecting factors led to different experiences, with low socioeconomic status particularly significant. Overall, disability and minoritised ethnic identities led to worse pandemic experiences. Our co-design work shows how to build on the assets and strengths; simple changes in professional communication and understanding should improve experience. Minoritised groups can easily be involved in policy and practice decision-making, reducing marginalisation, with better сare and outcomes.

FUTURE WORK

More research is needed on: (1) the impact of the post-pandemic economic situation and migration policies on migrant mental health/well-being; (2) supporting empowerment strategies across disadvantaged intersecting identities; and (3) technological deprivation and the cultural and disability-relevant acceptability of remote consultations. We found some differences in the devolved nations, which need elucidation.

STUDY REGISTRATION

This study is registered as ISRCTN40370, PROSPERO CRD42021262590 and CRD42022355254.

FUNDING

This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme (NIHR award ref: NIHR132914) and is published in full in Health and Social Care Delivery Research; Vol. 13, No. 2. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.

摘要

背景

新冠疫情加剧了社会中早已存在的不平等现象。我们的研究旨在解决目前研究的不足,这些不足体现在劣势和歧视的交叉因素如何影响少数族裔残疾人士的疫情日常生活,目标是改善他们的经历以及社会、健康和福祉状况。

目的

通过交叉性视角,按地点和时间探索并比较关于社会、健康和福祉结果不断变化的需求的调查及定性数据;将应对策略/解决方案与这些需求相关联;探究正式和非正式网络问题/便利条件;通过综合数据得出见解;将研究结果置于背景中并探索其可转移性;与利益相关者共同创造成果。

设计

混合方法,基于资产,以身体残疾模型和交叉性为基础,整合三个方面:(二手资料):对现有队列/面板数据的分析、文献综述(一手资料:定量):新的调查(n = 4326),在18个月内进行三次(一手资料:定性):半结构化访谈(n = 271),5个月和10个月后进行受访者共同创造研讨会(n = 104),为快速解决问题进行混合利益相关者共同设计研讨会(n = 30),关键信息提供者访谈(n = 4)。

背景

英国和爱尔兰共和国。

参与者

第二部分:有/无残疾的社区居住移民、英国白人对照者。第三部分:关注有/无残疾的阿拉伯、南亚、非洲、中欧/东欧或英国白人血统者。

结果

由于新冠病毒易感性,我们发现人们在(住宿、经济状况和残疾状况允许的情况下)严格遵守疫情限制措施。由于对副作用的担忧以及对政府的(错误)信任,疫苗犹豫率很高(尽管最终接种了)。许多人依赖食品银行、当地组织、社区和非正式网络。与疫情相关的收入损失很常见,尤其影响无证移民。参与者报告了心理健康护理、非整体化的社会和住房护理以及难以获得、质量差且具有歧视性的远程健康/社会护理方面的危机。他们更喜欢私人护理(但他们难以负担)、社区或自助在线支持。较低的社会经济地位、心理健康和行动能力问题降低了幸福感。个人和社区资产以及应对策略缓解了一些问题,这些策略在不同的疫情阶段有所调整,并侧重于赋权、自我反思、自我护理和社会联系。技术需求贯穿其中。

局限性

我们无法探究地区层面的社会距离和感染率。数据收集主要通过线上方式,可能排除了一些年长、数字资源匮乏或残疾程度更高的参与者。参与者在在线和面对面共同创造研讨会中的参与方式不同。我们的定性数据在很大程度上以英格兰和南亚人群为代表,并使用了有争议性的类别。

结论

不同的交叉因素导致了不同的经历,其中社会经济地位低的影响尤为显著。总体而言,残疾和少数族裔身份导致了更糟糕的疫情经历。我们的共同设计工作展示了如何利用资产和优势;专业沟通和理解方面的简单改变应该会改善体验。少数族裔群体可以轻松参与政策和实践决策,减少边缘化,从而获得更好的护理和结果。

未来工作

需要更多关于以下方面的研究:(1)疫情后经济形势和移民政策对移民心理健康/福祉的影响;(2)支持处于劣势的交叉身份群体的赋权策略;(3)技术剥夺以及远程咨询在文化和与残疾相关方面的可接受性。我们发现下放权力的国家存在一些差异,需要加以阐明。

研究注册

本研究注册为ISRCTN40370、PROSPERO CRD42021262590和CRD42022355254。

资金

本奖项由国家卫生与保健研究机构(NIHR)卫生与社会保健交付研究计划资助(NIHR奖项编号:NIHR132914),并全文发表于《卫生与社会保健交付研究》;第13卷,第2期。有关更多奖项信息,请参阅NIHR资金与奖项网站。

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