Blog Entry 3
Scholarly Article: Immigration status as a health care barrier in the USA during COVID-19 - ScienceDirect
This article focuses on the COVID-19 pandemic and migration. The United States implemented very strict laws that prevented migrants from entering the U.S because officials feared that they would further spread covid. Even though agencies like ICE have stated that the detention centers have taken mitigation measures, individuals have been discovered to be most at risk in those settings. The pandemic has done a very good job of showing just how forgotten about these people are. The chances of a minority person catching covid and dying is much higher than a white person who has better access to healthcare. As stated in this article," In 2018, almost one-quarter of authorized immigrants and almost half (45%) of undocumented immigrants in the U.S. did not have insurance, making noncitizens significantly more likely to be uninsured as compared to citizens." (Sciencedirect.com) That is an incredibly large number of immigrants who do not have insurance and during a time when some of them may really need it, they have nothing. This article also shows data about the different barriers' immigrants have to go through when in the U.S including laws, language barriers, financial barriers, and stigmas.
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