Mixed Methods Evaluation of the Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Immigrant Families.

Sydney Tyler, Lisa Abuogi, Valentina Vannoni, Lori Silveira, Sean Lang, Christiana Smith, Lisa Ross DeCamp
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Abstract

Introduction: Little is known about the experiences of immigrant families with COVID-19 illness. This mixed methods study compared child and household experiences at the time of a child's COVID-19 diagnosis between immigrant and US-born parents and explored immigrant Latino perspectives on underlying causes of COVID-19 disparities between immigrant and US-born families. Methods: Study data includes surveys of parents of a child with a positive SARS-CoV2 test resulting at Children's Hospital Colorado and focus groups with Latino immigrant adults. We compared household COVID-19 experiences, use of mitigation measures, vaccine intention and sociodemographic information between survey participants stratified by nativity and completed thematic qualitative data analysis. Results: Findings from quantitative data were reinforced by qualitative data including: lower socio-economic status and higher employment in essential services increased infections and spread in immigrant families and higher risk of limited information access related to language barriers and prevalent misinformation. Survey results showed no difference in COVID-19 vaccine intention by nativity. Focus group participants reported limited access to non-English language culturally-tailored vaccine information and competing work demands decreased uptake. Conclusion: Avoiding exacerbating disparities in the face of another public health emergency requires focused investments in policies and approaches specifically directed at immigrant communities.

新冠肺炎疫情对移民家庭影响的混合方法评价
我们对感染COVID-19的移民家庭的经历知之甚少。这项混合方法研究比较了移民和美国出生的父母在儿童被诊断为COVID-19时的儿童和家庭经历,并探讨了移民和美国出生的家庭之间COVID-19差异的根本原因。方法:研究数据包括对科罗拉多州儿童医院SARS-CoV2检测阳性儿童的父母的调查,以及拉丁裔移民成人的焦点小组。我们比较了按出生年龄分层的调查参与者的家庭COVID-19经历、缓解措施的使用、疫苗意向和社会人口信息,并完成了专题定性数据分析。结果:定量数据的发现得到了定性数据的支持,包括:社会经济地位较低和基本服务部门就业率较高,增加了移民家庭中的感染和传播,并且由于语言障碍和普遍存在的错误信息,信息获取受限的风险更高。调查结果显示,不同出生人群的COVID-19疫苗意向无差异。焦点小组参与者报告说,获得非英语文化量身定制的疫苗信息的机会有限,竞争性工作需求减少了吸收。结论:面对另一次突发公共卫生事件,要避免差距加剧,需要集中投资于专门针对移民社区的政策和方法。
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