This paper aims to show that the COVID-19 pandemic has amplified existing barriers to healthcare in England for ethnic minority and migrant women. These barriers include those embedded within the institution, stemming from community perceptions and relating to socio-economic factors. Though barriers to accessing healthcare have existed long before the pandemic, more attention must be devoted now because of the inequalities that COVID-19 has laid bare in England for ethnic minority and migrant women. By adopting an intersectional lens, this paper uncovers what has previously been hidden by ‘intersectional invisibility’, now exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. Whilst the pandemic has seen an increase in focus on inequalities related to race...
Objective Access to health services and adequate care is influenced by sex, ethnicity, socioeconomic...
Practice nurses are ideally placed within local communities to have a significant impact on addressi...
BackgroundThe SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has brought racial and ethnic inequity into sharp focus, as Black,...
This paper aims to show that the COVID-19 pandemic has amplified existing barriers to healthcare in ...
Our commentary aims to show that the COVID-19 pandemic has amplified existing barriers to healthcare...
• We have looked at the impact of the pandemic on access to healthcare services in England, focusing...
Covid-19 has been a disrupting event in contemporary social life but is far from being a great equal...
Abstract Background Difficulties accessing health car...
People from ethnic minority backgrounds in the UK have been disproportionately affected by coronavir...
In this submission, we discuss why women and people from ethnic backgrounds (BAME) are, and will be,...
Purpose – In March 2020, the UK entered its first lockdown responding to the Covid-19 pandemic. In t...
The response to the coronavirus outbreak and how the disease and its societal consequences pose risk...
Economic crises and instability during the COVID pandemic have led to a significant additional workl...
COVID-19 has uncovered the vulnerabilities, inequalities and fragility present within our social com...
The economic and public health crisis created by the COVID-19 pandemic has exposed existing inequali...
Objective Access to health services and adequate care is influenced by sex, ethnicity, socioeconomic...
Practice nurses are ideally placed within local communities to have a significant impact on addressi...
BackgroundThe SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has brought racial and ethnic inequity into sharp focus, as Black,...
This paper aims to show that the COVID-19 pandemic has amplified existing barriers to healthcare in ...
Our commentary aims to show that the COVID-19 pandemic has amplified existing barriers to healthcare...
• We have looked at the impact of the pandemic on access to healthcare services in England, focusing...
Covid-19 has been a disrupting event in contemporary social life but is far from being a great equal...
Abstract Background Difficulties accessing health car...
People from ethnic minority backgrounds in the UK have been disproportionately affected by coronavir...
In this submission, we discuss why women and people from ethnic backgrounds (BAME) are, and will be,...
Purpose – In March 2020, the UK entered its first lockdown responding to the Covid-19 pandemic. In t...
The response to the coronavirus outbreak and how the disease and its societal consequences pose risk...
Economic crises and instability during the COVID pandemic have led to a significant additional workl...
COVID-19 has uncovered the vulnerabilities, inequalities and fragility present within our social com...
The economic and public health crisis created by the COVID-19 pandemic has exposed existing inequali...
Objective Access to health services and adequate care is influenced by sex, ethnicity, socioeconomic...
Practice nurses are ideally placed within local communities to have a significant impact on addressi...
BackgroundThe SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has brought racial and ethnic inequity into sharp focus, as Black,...