“I Just Want Some Clear Answers”: Challenges and Tactics Adopted by Migrants in Denmark When Accessing Health Risk Information about COVID-19
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Location and Participants
2.2. Data Collection and Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Challenges: “I Just Want Some Clear Answers”
“It has been really hard to figure out like when Danes know [e.g., timing of press briefings]. Like that the prime minister is going to make a speech. Because it will happen at seemingly completely random times. And then like all the sudden we find out “oh yeah, she has been speaking for half an hour” and we turn it on. But like there was no way to figure out. Yeah, I never, I still don’t know how people are finding out when she was going to say important things. I was always like a bit behind”.(Leah, age 33)
“It’s still kind of difficult to figure out how to navigate certain things. Like what things are open and, you know, we didn’t know that you could get like a Coronavirus test until someone told us it. Like we haven’t gotten any communication from the Danish government at all. About what we should be doing or anything like that”.(Leah, age 33)
“But I don’t think I need more support exactly; I would just want some clear answers on what is allowed and what’s not. (…) It’s probably because we are not counted as well, but there is a lot of things that is about Danish citizens and not about foreigners”.(Heather, age 31)
“So most of the time I feel like that most of the information is in Danish, and I started to learn Danish recently, but I am not fluent yet”.(Matej, age 25)
“Information is not that clear. I mean, it is not eligible for people who are like us, immigrants”.(Faiza, 35)
“When it started to sort of get momentum, the whole pandemic. (…) In school we had a class that was completely dedicated to, you know, “this corona is looming, wash your hands”, you know, “sneeze in your elbows”. So like this sort of, they basically also explained the basic things about, you know, personal hygiene and safety.”(Irene, age 37)
“Our general manager would send us e-mails. Keeping us posted with what’s going on. (…). Most of the time actually all the time, we knew what’s going on. And they would tell us, you know: “when we gonna know more from the authorities, we’re gonna let you know””.(Bogdan, age 38)
3.2. Tactics: Seeking to ‘Be in the Know’
“And everyone was just watching the news, and again I don’t speak any Danish, but I just used the translator on my web browser to try to see if, what the authorities say, at least when they are on TV or the newspaper”.(Linh, age 30)
“So, it’s difficult and my boyfriend is happy to translate it. If relevant he translates it to me, but then I would like to process it on my own, you know”.(Faiza, 35)
“When it comes to information from Denmark, we, what we had to do, or didn’t do, we, we had a WhatsApp-group with our friends here in Copenhagen, and some of them have been here for many years, so they would send links with important information, and every time that Mette [the Danish Prime Minister] talked, they would just send a WhatsApp “so hey, that is kind of like the summary”, so they kind of like made it work for us”.(Blanca, age 35, Spain)
“(…) So it is a Facebook group. And there are some people there that right after the government announcements, they translate everything into bullet points what is most important, so mainly I would follow all the guidelines from there”.(Ana, age 34)
“The Facebook group actually helps quite a lot, because there are some people that they have been through the struggle of the language, and they know how difficult it is to actually have access to news etc. So you have a lot of support of people that have been living on the country, ehh, for many, many years, and they are actually there to support you and give you information”.(Ana, age 34)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Codes | Basic Themes |
Google Translate Information and news are in Danish Danish media are trustworthy Webpages in English (about Danish news) | 1. The majority of information about COVID-19 is in Danish |
Difficult to navigate things Guidelines are clear but hard to find Media is exaggerating Misinformation Worried about a second wave in Denmark Taking lockdown more serious The virus is not a threat | 2. Finding out what is going on when is difficult. |
Authorities in country of origin Forgotten Governmental offices are closed Not ´seen´ by authorities Satisfied with authorities’ response Fortunate to be in Denmark Some alternative sources are unreliable | 3. Feeling left out of the response. |
Relying on partner for translation Help with health-related issues (from friends and family) | 4. Relying on help with translation of COVID-19 related information |
Facebook-group for foreigners Help with translation of news Sources of news (on Facebook) are reliable | 5. Facebook-groups for migrants provides translation of Danish news. |
Different perception of disease Gets health advice from home country News from home country | 6. Getting news from country of origin as a way to stay informed |
Support from workplace Working remotely but nearby information | 7. Workplace provides information and support. |
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Name | Gender | Country of Origin | Age | Time in Denmark | Migrant Status | Date of Interview |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ana | Female | Latin America | 34 | 4 months | Temporary documents | 9 June 2020 |
Julia | Female | Eastern Europe | 28 | 7 years | Temporary documents | 4 June 2020 |
Viviana | Female | Latin America | 33 | 6 months | Temporary documents | 3 June 2020 |
Faiza | Female | Middle East | 35 | 10 months | Procedural stay 1 | 3 June 2020 |
Matej | Male | Eastern Europe | 25 | 1 year, 10 months | Permanent documents | 5 June 2020 |
Leah | Female | North America | 33 | 9 months | Temporary documents | 3 June 2020 |
Gosia | Female | Eastern Europe | 30 | 10 months | Permanent documents | 10 June 2020 |
Heather | Female | Western Pacific | 31 | 10 months | Temporary documents | 11 June 2020 |
Karim | Male | Middle East | 23 | 4 years | Temporary documents | 29 May 2020 |
Blanca | Female | Western Europe | 35 | 1 year | Permanent documents | 17 June 2020 |
Linh | Female | South-East Asia | 30 | 2 years | Temporary documents | 3 June 2020 |
Irene | Female | Eastern Europe | 37 | 1 year | Temporary documents | 14 June 2020 |
Lucia | Female | South America | 38 | 6 years | Temporary documents | 12 June 2020 |
Bogdan | Male | Eastern Europe | 38 | 3 years | Temporary documents | 10 June 2020 |
Bussaba | Female | South-East Asia | 44 | 2 years, 6 months | Temporary documents | 1 June 2020 |
Lamai | Female | South-East Asia | 38 | 4 years | Temporary documents | 2 June 2020 |
Sarah | Female | North America | 36 | 2 years | Temporary documents | 17 June 2020 |
Thomas | Male | Southern Africa | 38 | 3 years | Temporary documents | 3 June 2020 |
Basic Themes | Organizing Themes |
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| 1. I just want some clear answers |
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| 2. Seeking to ‘be in the know’ |
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Brønholt, R.L.L.; Langer Primdahl, N.; Jensen, A.M.B.; Verelst, A.; Derluyn, I.; Skovdal, M. “I Just Want Some Clear Answers”: Challenges and Tactics Adopted by Migrants in Denmark When Accessing Health Risk Information about COVID-19. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 8932. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18178932
Brønholt RLL, Langer Primdahl N, Jensen AMB, Verelst A, Derluyn I, Skovdal M. “I Just Want Some Clear Answers”: Challenges and Tactics Adopted by Migrants in Denmark When Accessing Health Risk Information about COVID-19. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(17):8932. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18178932
Chicago/Turabian StyleBrønholt, Rasmus Luca Lyager, Nina Langer Primdahl, Anja M. B. Jensen, An Verelst, Ilse Derluyn, and Morten Skovdal. 2021. "“I Just Want Some Clear Answers”: Challenges and Tactics Adopted by Migrants in Denmark When Accessing Health Risk Information about COVID-19" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 17: 8932. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18178932
APA StyleBrønholt, R. L. L., Langer Primdahl, N., Jensen, A. M. B., Verelst, A., Derluyn, I., & Skovdal, M. (2021). “I Just Want Some Clear Answers”: Challenges and Tactics Adopted by Migrants in Denmark When Accessing Health Risk Information about COVID-19. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(17), 8932. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18178932