Abstract

Background:The pandemics of COVID-19 and systemic racism have a deleterious impact on the daily life experiences and health for populations of color. The experiences are compounded for immigrant/refugee communities that may have other barriers such as English language literacy or trauma. Cumulative stress due to everyday racism is harmful for health.Objectives:This study describes the impact of day-to-day lived experiences of Karen, Somali, and Latinx communities during the COVID-19 pandemic and aftermath of the police murder of George Floyd in the Minneapolis/St. Paul metro area.Methods:In-depth interviews were conducted over three weeks in September and October 2020 to understand the daily life experiences of Karen, Somali and Latinx adults drawn from community contacts during the COVID-19 pandemic and the aftermath of the police murder of George Floyd. Interviewers were bilingual and from the communities they interviewed. Nine questions were asked, ranging from their knowledge of COVID-19, prevention practices, experiences during shelter-in-place, and the perceptions of the police murder of George Floyd. Qualitative analysis included transcript review, coding facilitated by Atlas.ti Cloud software, summaries, and validation by interviewers.Findings:Thirty-two adults were interviewed (Latinx = 10, Karen = 10, Somali = 12). One-third were in person per participant request and complying with COVID-19 precautions, and the remainder were remote. The average age recorded was 37 years (range 20–66 years), 43.8% males and 56.3% females. Respondents reported experiences of discrimination and systemic racism while engaging in daily life activities, including accessing foods and common goods, school, work, transportation, and healthcare, all of which were exacerbated by COVID-19 and the police murder of George Floyd.Conclusions:Immigrant/refugee communities of color in Minneapolis/St. Paul face daily experiences of racism that were compounded by the events of 2020. Discrimination and systemic racism contribute to the persistent health inequities among populations of color.

Highlights

  • The pandemics of COVID-19 and systemic racism have a deleterious impact on the daily life experiences and health for populations of color

  • In-depth interviews were conducted over three weeks in September and October 2020 to understand the daily life experiences of Karen, Somali and Latinx adults drawn from community contacts during the COVID-19 pandemic and the aftermath of the police murder of George Floyd

  • Discrimination and systemic racism contribute to the persistent health inequities among populations of color

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The pandemics of COVID-19 and systemic racism have a deleterious impact on the daily life experiences and health for populations of color. Persistent and daily experiences of racism contribute to higher rates of morbidity and mortality [2] with substantial mental health consequences [3]. BIPOC communities experience elevated and prolonged levels of stress while engaging in daily life activities due to experiences of racism, trauma, and negative thinking [4]. This increases cortisol levels, which contribute to higher rates of morbidity and mortality [5, 6]. Xenophobia, microaggressions, and racism are persistent for Asian (“Chinavirus”) [12, 13], Latinx (undocumented) [14], and Somali (duality of Black and Muslim) immigrants/ refugees [15]. The current experiences of xenophobia and a lack of access to healthcare resources among undocumented immigrants [14, 16, 17] perpetuates health inequities

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call