Learning from the COVID-19 pandemic among migrants: An innovative, system-level, interdisciplinary approach is needed to improve public health

Author:

Diaz Esperanza123ORCID,Mamelund Svenn-Eirik4ORCID,Eid Jarle15,Aasen Henriette Sinding16,Martin Kaarbøe Oddvar127,Brokstad Rebecca Jane Cox18,Gloppen Siri19ORCID,Beyer Anders110,Kumar Bernadette Nirmal3

Affiliation:

1. Pandemic Centre, University of Bergen, Norway

2. Department for Global Public Health and Primary Care, Faculty of Medicine, University of Bergen, Norway

3. Unit for Migration and Health, Norwegian Institute of Public Health (FHI), Norway

4. Centre for Research on Pandemics, OsloMet, Norway

5. Centre for Crisis Psychology, University of Bergen, Norway

6. Faculty of Law, University of Bergen, Norway

7. Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Bergen, Norway

8. Faculty of Medicine, University of Bergen, Norway

9. Department of Comparative Politics, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Bergen, Norway

10. Faculty of Fine Art, Music and Design, University of Bergen, Norway

Abstract

The effects of the COVID-19 pandemic are amplified among socially vulnerable groups, including international migrants, in terms of both disease transmission and outcomes and the consequences of mitigation measures. Migrants are overrepresented in COVID-19 laboratory-confirmed cases, hospital admissions, intensive care treatment and death statistics in all countries with available data. A syndemic approach has been suggested to understand the excess burden in vulnerable populations. However, this has not stopped the unequal burden of disease in Norway. Initially, the disease was mainly imported by Norwegians returning from skiing holidays in the Alps, and the prevalence of infection among migrants in Norway, defined as people born abroad to foreign parents, was low. Later, confirmed cases in migrants increased and have remained stable at 35–50% – more than twice the proportion of the migrant population (15%). To change this pattern, we need to understand the complex mechanisms underlying inequities in health and their relative and multiplying impacts on disease inequalities and to test the effect of counterfactual policies in order to reduce inequalities in disease burden. Yet, the current paradigm in the field of migration and health research, that is, the theories, research methods and explanatory models commonly applied, fail to fully understand the differences in health outcomes between international migrants and the host population. Here, we use the Norwegian situation as a case to explain the need for an innovative, system-level, interdisciplinary approach at a global level.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine

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