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

IF 4.1 Q1 PSYCHIATRY SSM. Mental health Pub Date : 2023-12-24 DOI:10.1016/j.ssmmh.2023.100293
Tara F. Abularrage , Heather M. Wurtz , Goleen Samari
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Abstract

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 semi-structured 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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应对结构性不平等:COVID-19 期间移民妇女的应对策略
对移民社区的应对策略和复原力进行研究,体现了与移民社区合作以了解他们的需求,同时发现并利用他们的优势的决心。在美国,COVID-19 大流行病对身体、情感和经济的影响与现有的结构性不平等交织在一起,产生了与大流行病、移民、护理责任和结构性仇外心理相关的独特挑战和压力。本定性研究利用对压力的多层次影响的理解,探讨了移民妇女为应对、减轻或减少与这些复合压力相关的困扰而采取的个人、人际和社区层面的应对策略。通过在 2020 年和 2021 年对 44 名来自不同国家的第一代和第二代顺性别移民妇女以及 19 名为纽约市移民社区提供服务的直接服务提供者进行半结构式深度访谈,采用恒定比较法对数据进行编码和分析。确定了四个中心主题:作为力量源泉的照顾、利用资源、社会联系和社区支持。虽然妇女们描述了她们用来应对压力和挑战的一系列应对策略,但直接服务提供者的观点也将这些应对策略与造成伤害的机构、政策和结构联系起来,这些机构、政策和结构产生并维护着结构性压迫和不平等。服务提供者的叙述指出了长期应对的有害长期影响,强调了复原力和脆弱性之间的双重性。在结构脆弱性加剧的时期,探索顺性别移民妇女用来缓解痛苦和提高复原力的应对策略,对于以移民妇女的经历为中心,同时引导人们关注解决累积性不利处境的根本原因,以及传播这种不利处境的制度和结构至关重要。
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来源期刊
SSM. Mental health
SSM. Mental health Social Psychology, Health
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
118 days
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