Working around safety net exclusions during the COVID-19 pandemic: A qualitative study of rural Latinx immigrants

Rural Latinx immigrants experienced disproportionately negative health and economic impacts during the COVID-19 pandemic. They contended with the pandemic at the intersection of legal status exclusions from the safety net and long-standing barriers to health care in rural regions. Yet, little is kno...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social science & medicine (1982) 2022-10, Vol.311, p.115352-115352, Article 115352
Hauptverfasser: Young, Maria-Elena De Trinidad, Perez-Lua, Fabiola, Sarnoff, Hannah, Plancarte, Vivianna, Goldman-Mellor, Sidra, Payán, Denise Diaz
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Rural Latinx immigrants experienced disproportionately negative health and economic impacts during the COVID-19 pandemic. They contended with the pandemic at the intersection of legal status exclusions from the safety net and long-standing barriers to health care in rural regions. Yet, little is known about how rural Latinx immigrants navigated such exclusions. In this qualitative study, we examined how legal status stratification in rural contexts influenced Latinx immigrant families’ access to the safety net. We conducted interviews with first- and second-generation Latinx immigrants (n = 39) and service providers (n = 20) in four rural California communities between July 2020 and April 2021. We examined personal and organizational strategies used to obtain economic, health, and other forms of support. We found that Latinx families navigated a limited safety net with significant exclusions. In response, they enacted short-term strategies and practices – workarounds – that met immediate, short-term needs. Workarounds, however, were enacted through individual efforts, allowing little recourse beyond immediate personal agency. Some took the form of strategic practices within the safety net, such as leveraging resources that did not require legal status verification; in other cases, they took the form of families opting to avoid the safety net altogether. •Rural Latinx immigrant families faced safety net exclusions during the pandemic.•Exclusions were produced by rural contexts and legal status exclusions.•Workarounds leveraged personal and organizational strategies to obtain resources.•Workarounds tapped into family mixed-status and low-barrier resources.•Despite workarounds, structural exclusions persisted.
ISSN:0277-9536
1873-5347
DOI:10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.115352