TY - JOUR
T1 - Attitudes among working professionals toward immigrants and refugees living in Ecuador
T2 - Impacts on health and well-being
AU - Dressel, Anne
AU - Falconí, Elízabeth
AU - Luft, Heidi
AU - Hawkins, Maren
AU - Noboa, Hugo
AU - Betancourt, Óscar
AU - Sedar, Alexandria
AU - Shedlin, Michele G.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
PY - 2020/7/1
Y1 - 2020/7/1
N2 - Objective: To explore attitudes toward immigrants and refugees living in Ecuador. Design and Measures: A transnationalism framework informed this qualitative study, which utilized a semi-structured interview guide to elicit responses from participants about their attitudes toward immigrants and refugees. Interviews were conducted in Spanish, audio-taped, transcribed, coded, and analyzed in Spanish to identify emergent themes. Demographic data were analyzed using SPSS. Sample: Participants (n = 50) were recruited from five sectors that interact with refugees: health care, the press, the police, nongovernmental organizations, and education. Fifty interviews were conducted with adults in Quito, Ecuador, in 2017. Results: Participants reported concerns about the health and well-being of immigrants and refugees, expressed a willingness to assist them, but within limits, noted discrimination and bias against refugees, and cited social policies and human rights as factors that influenced their attitudes. Conclusions: Our findings indicate that immigrants and refugees face challenges which impact their health and well-being, according to participants in the study. Social policies can influence attitudes, but are also affected by rapidly shifting immigration patterns. Migration flows in South America is an under-studied area of research, with opportunity for further public health nursing inquiry.
AB - Objective: To explore attitudes toward immigrants and refugees living in Ecuador. Design and Measures: A transnationalism framework informed this qualitative study, which utilized a semi-structured interview guide to elicit responses from participants about their attitudes toward immigrants and refugees. Interviews were conducted in Spanish, audio-taped, transcribed, coded, and analyzed in Spanish to identify emergent themes. Demographic data were analyzed using SPSS. Sample: Participants (n = 50) were recruited from five sectors that interact with refugees: health care, the press, the police, nongovernmental organizations, and education. Fifty interviews were conducted with adults in Quito, Ecuador, in 2017. Results: Participants reported concerns about the health and well-being of immigrants and refugees, expressed a willingness to assist them, but within limits, noted discrimination and bias against refugees, and cited social policies and human rights as factors that influenced their attitudes. Conclusions: Our findings indicate that immigrants and refugees face challenges which impact their health and well-being, according to participants in the study. Social policies can influence attitudes, but are also affected by rapidly shifting immigration patterns. Migration flows in South America is an under-studied area of research, with opportunity for further public health nursing inquiry.
KW - Ecuador
KW - global health
KW - immigrant and refugee health
KW - immigrants
KW - refugees
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U2 - 10.1111/phn.12734
DO - 10.1111/phn.12734
M3 - Article
C2 - 32342568
AN - SCOPUS:85084205024
SN - 0737-1209
VL - 37
SP - 517
EP - 524
JO - Public Health Nursing
JF - Public Health Nursing
IS - 4
ER -