COVID-19 Pandemic Among Immigrant Latinx Farmworker and Non-farmworker Families: A Rural-Urban Comparison of Economic, Educational, Healthcare, and Immigration Concerns.
Sara A QuandtNatalie J LaMontoDana C MoraJennifer W TaltonPaul J LaurientiThomas A ArcuryPublished in: New solutions : a journal of environmental and occupational health policy : NS (2021)
COVID-19 has revealed social and health inequities in the United States. Structural inequalities have increased the likelihood of immigrants contracting COVID-19, by being essential workers and through poverty that forces this population to continue working. Rural and urban immigrant families may face different concerns. Using a telephone survey in May 2020 of 105 Latinx families in an existing study, quantitative and qualitative data were gathered on work and household economics, childcare and education, healthcare, and community climate. Analyses show that, although rural and urban groups experienced substantial economic effects, impacts were more acute for urban families. Rural workers reported fewer workplace protective measures for COVID-19. For both groups, fear and worry, particularly about finances and children, dominated reports of their situations with numerous reports of experiencing stress and anxiety. The experience of the pandemic is interpreted as an example of contextual vulnerability of a population already experiencing structural violence through social injustice. Policy implications are highlighted.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- coronavirus disease
- sars cov
- south africa
- mental health
- climate change
- public health
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- systematic review
- liver failure
- high resolution
- health information
- adverse drug
- emergency department
- respiratory failure
- cross sectional
- mass spectrometry
- hepatitis b virus
- intensive care unit
- quality improvement
- clinical evaluation
- data analysis