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Caring during the COVID‐19 crisis: Intersectional exclusion of immigrant women health care aides in Canadian long‐term care
Author(s) -
Lightman Naomi
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
health and social care in the community
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.984
H-Index - 68
eISSN - 1365-2524
pISSN - 0966-0410
DOI - 10.1111/hsc.13541
Subject(s) - workforce , immigration , pandemic , social exclusion , health care , economic growth , intersectionality , precarity , long term care , political science , sociology , medicine , public relations , nursing , covid-19 , gender studies , disease , pathology , infectious disease (medical specialty) , law , economics
Long‐term care (LTC) facilities have emerged as the single most critical location for the outbreak of the COVID‐19 pandemic across Canada and internationally. Yet the voices of health care aides (HCAs), an overwhelmingly female and racialized workforce who provide essential daily care to LTC residents, have largely been ignored to‐date. This community‐based research study provides new data collected from 25 in‐depth individual interviews with immigrant women HCAs who were working in LTC in Calgary, Alberta between January 1 and March 30, 2021. The data, analysed through the lens of intersectional exclusion, highlight how the pandemic has impacted the working lives of immigrant women employed in LTC facilities on a daily basis, as well as their suggestions for enhancing their safety and employment conditions. Two key themes emerged during the process of data analysis: (a) HCA experiences of economic exclusion and workplace precarity—many of which pre‐dated the pandemic but have been exacerbated by current policies and practices that prioritize profits over quality of community care, and (b) experiences of broader social exclusion, many of which are tied to being considered “just HCAs” who are doing “immigrant's work”, rather than including HCAs in broader conversations about how to reform and improve the LTC sector for future. Concluding thoughts discuss how to improve policy to support low wage workers within LTC in order to address intersectional inequalities and to better support front‐line care workers during current and future health pandemic recovery efforts.

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