Human Rights First: A Complex Landscape of Healthcare Access for Latinx Immigrants
America's healthcare system is neither equitable nor accessible to all.
Due to the persistent racial disparities ingrained in our country's institutions, immigrants--especially Latinx immigrants--encounter significant barriers in accessing quality healthcare. These challenges extend to securing stable, well-paying employment, ensuring job safety, and environmental health, including living and working in areas with high levels of exposure to air pollution, dangerous drinking water, and lead or mercury contamination. Furthermore, obstacles such as difficulty entering American degree programs and language barriers hinder immigrants from accessing high-quality jobs, which negatively impacts their ability to afford quality healthcare.
These issues compound for Latinx immigrants, especially those seeking citizenship in
The COVID-19 pandemic illuminated these disparities even further. The pandemic has disproportionately affected Latinx immigrants, evidenced by high rates of hospitalizations and deaths in this group. The
During the pandemic, tens of thousands of internationally trained healthcare workers, many of whom are immigrants, were unable to work here because their training is not recognized by
COVID-19 serves as a lens through which to understand the broader and ongoing issues plaguing the Latinx immigrant community in America. The pandemic heightened issues of poverty, job access, racism, and access to healthcare.
Based on these challenges, Latinx immigrants in America were far less likely to receive necessary preventive or immediate care during the COVID-19 pandemic. Access to health insurance is the first step for many in accessing quality care. The
Lastly, fears surrounding deportation and the American legal system pose major issues for Latinx immigrants in accessing basic healthcare needs.
These issues of access to healthcare in America for Latinx immigrants underscore the problems of privatized healthcare, unfair and inhumane immigrant laws, structural issues with wages, institutional poverty, and more. Immigrants already face social, legal, professional, and educational barriers and discrimination in America, and should not also have to struggle to obtain what ought to be the universal human right of healthcare. Systemic policy and business changes must be made to change the outcome for America's Latinx immigrant population.
The disproportionate lack of access to good medical care for Latinx immigrants during the pandemic serves as a lens for the larger issues of racial, class, and citizen status inequity in healthcare in
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Original text here: https://humanrightsfirst.org/library/a-complex-landscape-of-healthcare-access-for-latinx-immigrants/


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