Roma Women’s Role in the Health Preservation of Their Communities during the COVID-19 Pandemic
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
I believe that the Roma woman is justly distinguished or identified because she is the one who is the mover inside the home, the one who spreads values in one way or another, she is the one who is the center in terms of morality and values. So, in a way that I think is logical, all this that we are talking about has also fallen on her, hasn’t it? (HVHA1, Roma man).
3.1. Incidence on Physical Health
There’s a bit of everything, but no, because my neighborhood is colorful, and well, the neighborhood was a bit lonely, but it was the Roma community, the Roma women who took the lead, and so now I speak as [her name], I was the promoter of a food bank […] and well, in the end I gave to everyone, it was for my people. And the Roma women went to the food bank, but not just the Roma women, the Nigerian woman, the Arab woman, the woman from the majority community, everything was full of women (HVMC4, Roma woman).
And then when there was an outbreak of Covid in [name of the place] and all that, [name] went to the [center for social emergencies and emergencies], they activated the home visits. […] They went here, to tell her but they had already done all the work, because she had gone to emergencies and they said: “Don’t worry, we’ll bring the food” (ESCOCPC 6_2, social worker).
3.2. Incidence on Mental Health
It has affected me above all in terms of insecurity and mistrust, because it was something we didn’t know what it was like, a bit of uncertainty and a bit of psychosis because we didn’t know what it was all about, so the truth is that I was always in front and very strong in front of my children because there was nothing else left […] and we had nothing else left but fear. Fear, but not showing it to my children, fear and insecurities’ (HVMA3, Roma woman).
Yes, but I think it is more nostalgia than anything else, but not being able to accompany a person in hospitals or cemeteries or whatever ails them, I think it has left us all touched (HVMA1, Roma woman).
They were very small of course, and I didn’t want it to affect them when we came back to life and they were afraid to relate to people, I tried by all means all the time to keep them active, we created a blackboard, we did activities, then upstairs or in the block is the terrace and my husband occasionally took them upstairs and there with them played, gave them air, the babies were there for a while and it was the way they went out somewhere (HVMC6, Roma woman).
I remember that my older girl had a kind of anxiety attack, she started to cry a lot, she wanted to go out, she wanted to go outside, I just remember that I was sitting in the shower with her waiting for her to get over the anxiety attack she had, I remember that I put her pajama’s on, I was with her next to the bed until she got over the attack (HVMA2, Roma woman).
3.3. Follow-Up of the Measures for the Prevention, Protection, and Monitoring of COVID-19
At the Roma level we had very few because the families always tried to manage somehow to take care of the sick person at home, if they had to isolate them they would isolate them’ (ESOC1, social worker).
Because when I caught it, the truth is that when I was discharged I could leave the room, I didn’t leave the room directly, in other words, I stayed there for four more days because I wanted to. And of course I had to leave the room with gloves, with disinfectant, I sat on the sofa and put a plastic bag […] I took the sheets off every day, I washed the clothes at sixty, with bleach, we ate with plastic things to throw away, I didn’t want anyone in the house, it was an obsession, I didn’t want to go out in the street. (HVMC10, Roma woman).
During the first few months of the pandemic, because no one was to be seen on the street, so it was very strict (…) When the old tests came out, the ones that were done nasally, that were done at the center, they came repeatedly, the whole family came, even when we were told that they could not be done indiscriminately and the primary health center did not do it indiscriminately, but with a selection criteria, because they came to us at night to do it to the whole family and we did it because you could see how anxious they were, and maybe they came two, three or four times a month to do it, when someone thought they might be infected, they would come and if they could, they would take the whole family (EOSC2, health professional).
Yes that maybe there have been as it seemed that they were so scrupulous with the cleanliness and so, maybe other pathologies have not had them as they could be respiratory infections and so, there have been fewer, but there have also been fewer in general, and also in terms of allergies, it has been seen that there have also been fewer cases due to wearing masks and that there have been fewer outings’ (EOSC2, health professional).
Yes, the Roma woman has done a lot, because yes, they have been the ones who have taken care of the children, they have taken the children forward, taken them to the doctor, taken the family forward (HVMA4, Roma woman).
3.4. Utilization of Health Resources and Equipment
The first month, when there was a stricter confinement, attendance dropped a lot. In other words, the Roma families were very strict with the confinement, there was a lot of fear […] The women had more fear than the men […] It was fear […] It was a fear […] I believe that the women had more fear than the men […]. It was a fear, I think that maybe they had a lot of fear for their children, for their families or for themselves, but there was a lot of fear […] Attendance went down a lot […] Afterwards, as it became more relaxed, they started to come (EOSC2, health professional).
And with the sewing workshop that they facilitated, we even started sewing masks. People who didn’t have any resources to protect themselves contacted us through a Facebook page and told us ‘We are so many people, we need so many masks’. […] I was super pregnant, with my belly, I think I sewed like 100 or 200 masks, and it was my way of being able to help (HVMC13, Roma woman).
3.5. Vaccination and Information
By complying so much with the norms, and the confinement, they came to ask for medication, as soon as the vaccine came out, they all wanted to be vaccinated immediately. (EOSC2, health professional)
Here there has been a lot of campaigning, at least there have been awareness campaigns and there was also a group of certain associations like [names], there were a series of entities that joined the vaccination, and the truth is that people here have been very receptive, and many people have gone to get vaccinated, there are others who haven’t. There is a percentage who are very afraid, but there is another percentage who want to get vaccinated and so they can go out on the street and they have more freedom. And here they would say to me ‘But I can’t find an appointment, but who do I have to call?’ And the truth is that I can’t complain that there are families who haven’t wanted to get vaccinated, I can say that the vast majority of the Roma population here, for example, in my case, people have been very receptive and have been vaccinated. (ESOCPC3, social worker)
Well, here in the neighborhood they have been vaccinated quite a lot, there are those who didn’t want to, but those who are at risk, those who have children at risk and that’s why they ask me: ‘Well, what do you say about the vaccine?’ And I said: ‘I’ll get vaccinated, I want to hug my mother’. Of course, when you talk about you to them, they see that you have the same problems as them and that you are there, so yes, here they have been vaccinated a lot (HVMC5, Roma woman).
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Code | Name | Description |
---|---|---|
C1SF | Physical Health | Covid, Covid-derived disease, chronic disease, common illness, nutrition, physical activity |
C2SM | Mental Health | Depression, anxiety, abulia, other severe mental disorders |
C3RSS | Social and health resources | Psychosocial care, medical care, food, hygiene products, money, sanitary products, medication |
C4I | Information | Media, community networks, social organizations, health and educational institutions |
C5V | Vaccination | Attitudes towards vaccination, level of knowledge, vaccinated people |
C6LF | Women’s leadership | Social actions towards the community, caregiving role, family organization, decision making, maintenance role, family dynamics |
Category | Exclusionary Dimension | Transformative Dimension |
---|---|---|
C1SF | 1 | 2 |
C2SM | 3 | 4 |
C3RSS | 5 | 6 |
C4I | 7 | 8 |
C5V | 9 | 10 |
C5LF | 11 | 12 |
Interviewees | COVID-19 | Vaccine |
---|---|---|
HVMC1 | Without information | Yes |
HVMC2 | Yes | Yes |
HVMC3 | Yes | Yes |
HVMC5 | Without information | Yes |
HVMC6 | No COVID-19 | Yes |
HVMC7 | Yes | No |
HVMC8 | No | Yes |
HVMC9 | No | Without information |
HVMC10 | Yes | Yes |
HVMC11 | No | Yes |
HVMC12 | No | Yes |
HVMC13 | Without information | Without information |
HVMC14 | No | No |
HVMC15 | Yes | Yes |
HVMC16 | No | Yes |
HVMC17 | Yes | No |
HVMC 18 | Yes | Yes |
HVMC19 | Yes | Yes |
HVMA1 | Yes | Without information |
HVMA2 | Without information | Without information |
HVMA3 | Without information | Without information |
HVME1 | Without information | Without information |
HVME2 | No | Without information |
HVME3 | Yes | Without information |
HVME4 | No | Yes |
HVME5 | No | Without information |
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Abella, P.; Aubert, A.; Matulič, M.V.; Munté-Pascual, A. Roma Women’s Role in the Health Preservation of Their Communities during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2024, 21, 985. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21080985
Abella P, Aubert A, Matulič MV, Munté-Pascual A. Roma Women’s Role in the Health Preservation of Their Communities during the COVID-19 Pandemic. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2024; 21(8):985. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21080985
Chicago/Turabian StyleAbella, Paula, Adriana Aubert, María Virginia Matulič, and Ariadna Munté-Pascual. 2024. "Roma Women’s Role in the Health Preservation of Their Communities during the COVID-19 Pandemic" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 21, no. 8: 985. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21080985
APA StyleAbella, P., Aubert, A., Matulič, M. V., & Munté-Pascual, A. (2024). Roma Women’s Role in the Health Preservation of Their Communities during the COVID-19 Pandemic. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 21(8), 985. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21080985