key: cord-0946028-o6d23mw6 authors: Duh-Leong, Carol; Yin, H. Shonna; Yi, Stella S.; Chen, Sabrina L.; Mui, Angel; Perrin, Eliana M.; Zhao, Qiuqu; Gross, Rachel S. title: Material Hardship and Stress from COVID-19 in Immigrant Chinese American Families with Infants date: 2021-09-07 journal: J Immigr Minor Health DOI: 10.1007/s10903-021-01267-8 sha: 9c437657a15dc9e6003dc91a37ad35879bad08cb doc_id: 946028 cord_uid: o6d23mw6 Material hardship and stress, associated with poor infant outcomes, increased during the Coronavirus Disease 2019 pandemic. Chinese American families were vulnerable to racism-driven disparities. Little is known about maternal perceptions of pandemic impacts on their infants, family, and community. Purposive sampling of low-income Chinese American mothers (n = 25) with infants (1–15 months). Semi-structured qualitative interviews conducted in Mandarin, Cantonese, or English were audio-recorded, transcribed, and translated. Transcripts coded using applied thematic analysis in an iterative process of textual analysis until thematic saturation. Three themes emerged: (1) Heightened family hardship included financial strain, disruption of transnational childcare, experiences of racism; (2) Altered infant routines/developmental consequences included using protective equipment on infants, concerns about infant socio-emotional development; (3) Coping strategies included stockpiling essentials, adapting family diets. Strategies to mitigate disparities include expanding social needs screening, correcting misinformation, strengthening support networks, and including low-income Chinese Americans in these efforts. The economic and societal consequences of the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic led to material hardship [1] and increased psychosocial stress [2, 3] for families with children. Infancy represents a critical period of cognitive, socio-emotional, and behavioral development with lifelong consequences [4] . Previous studies have identified associations between material hardships, or a lack of essential resources, and poor outcomes in key infant domains such as cognitive development [5] , obesogenic feeding behaviors [6] , and decreased sleep duration [7] . Psychosocial stress in parents, including depressive or anxious symptoms, is also associated with infant developmental delay [5] and poor nutritional outcomes [8] . Economic and societal COVID-19 impacts, such as unemployment and mistrust of public information, have compounded inequalities in resource and information access and exacerbated poverty-related social determinants of health [9, 10] . However, despite these quantitative assessments, there is a gap in understanding their broader context, as well as detailing reactive coping mechanisms in vulnerable families with infants, particularly in low-income Chinese Americans. During the first eleven months of the pandemic, there were over 3,700 reports of discrimination targeting Asian Americans in the United States (US) [11] , as well as increased calls for research to document potential racism [12, 13] . In addition to stress from direct discrimination, low-income Chinese American families quickly contended with specific damage to Chinatown-based small business economies [14, 15] . Despite research highlighting challenges for families and data suggesting that Chinese American communities reliant on immigrant-owned small businesses for subsistence may be vulnerable, little is known about how families with infants from this understudied population [16] experienced targeted impacts of the pandemic. A broader understanding of how the pandemic increased material hardships and psychosocial stressors, as well as identifying the strategies families used to cope with parenting challenges, will inform pediatric primary care delivery of support to vulnerable populations during crisis. To fill these gaps, we conducted semi-structured qualitative interviews with low-income Chinese American mothers to learn about maternal perceptions of how the pandemic impacted their infants, family, and community. We performed a qualitative study of mother-infant pairs at a federally qualified health center in Brooklyn, New York, which serves predominantly immigrant, low-income Chinese American families. The clinic is in Sunset Park, a neighborhood considered Brooklyn's Chinatown, with a large population of working-class immigrants from China's Fujian province [17] . In this clinic, there are ~ 30,000 visits a year, with 40% pediatric patients (newborn to 18 years), 92% Medicaid eligible, 92% Asian, and 86% best served in a language other than English. We purposively sampled mothers in the HealthySteps program [18] (universally offered at this clinic), to obtain maximum variation across parenting experiences in early (1-7 months) and late infancy/early toddlerhood (8-15 months) . HealthySteps integrates behavioral health specialists into pediatric primary care to support American Academy of Pediatrics recommendations [18] . A bilingual community health worker partnered with the HealthySteps specialist to recruit eligible mothers between June 2020 and September 2020 for a one-time interview. Inclusion criteria included mothers who were 18 years or older, of Chinese descent, were able to speak Mandarin, Cantonese, or English, and had a child between the ages of 1 and 15 months. Inclusion criteria did not include immigration status. Exclusion criteria excluded mothers with significant medical illness likely to impair their participation. Due to social distancing restrictions during the COVID-19 pandemic, interviews were conducted remotely. Mothers were consented electronically for both the interview and telephone audiotaping. Participants were compensated with a $20 gift card. This study was approved by the Institutional Review Board of NYU Grossman School of Medicine. Our interview guide (Table 1) was designed and iteratively revised by a multicultural interdisciplinary team, including pediatricians, a community health worker, and specialists in Asian American immigrant populations and early childhood. Interview questions were informed by the COVID-19 Exposure and Family Impact Survey [19] , Medical Outcomes Study Social Support Scale [20] , Food Security Module from the US Department of Agriculture [21] , and Everyday Discrimination Scale [22] . Two trained interviewers (AM and SC) conducted interviews between 25 and 37 min long, the majority conducted by AM. Both interviewers have written and spoken native fluency in Mandarin and English while one (AM) had additional native fluency in Cantonese. Debriefs were conducted after every other interview to inform iterative changes in the interview guide, to allow emergent concepts to be tested with future participants, and for interviewers to reflect on and develop facilitation skills. All interviews were directly uploaded to a professional service using a HIPAA-secure transcription mobile app. The audio recordings were first transcribed and proofread verbatim in the source language, then translated and proofread by another professional interpreter. This transcript was then reviewed by the interviewer (AM/SC) to safeguard translation accuracy and semantic/conceptual equivalence. Researchers used applied thematic analysis to identify and iteratively refine codes that emerged from the interviews and devise a final code structure. The team derived structural codes from the research questions and expert understanding of the field as well as emergent codes from iterative review of the interviews. The team independently read transcripts in their entirety to label broad themes, then discussed individual observations and recurring themes. Interviews were conducted until thematic saturation was reached. Interviews were independently coded by four team members using textual analysis, prioritizing in vivo, versus, and process coding. Consensus was reached on consistency, coherence, and distinctiveness before finalizing the codebook. Subsequent interviews were coded by 2 team members (CDL and SC) who met to discuss codes and resolve disagreements with 2 arbitrators (RG and SY). Consensus was reached regarding each representative quotation based on agreed upon themes. Findings were presented semi-monthly to the HealthySteps team and clinic providers to test credibility and potential research bias. Data organization, retrieval and stratification by child age was facilitated by Dedoose (version 8.3.35). Sociodemographic data collected during the interview included maternal and child age, parity, maternal country and province of origin, number of years in the US, employment information, and educational level. We interviewed 25 mothers who were primarily first generation immigrants born in China (96%) and preferred interviews in Mandarin (80%; Table 2 ). About half (52%) of infants were in early infancy (1-7 months) and 48% in later infancy/early toddlerhood (8-15 months) . Almost a third (32%) of mothers delivered their baby during the height of the pandemic in New York City (March-May 2020 [23] ). The most common parent job descriptions were restaurant worker (e.g. cashier, food delivery person, server), manicurist, or home health aide. Forty percent of mothers mentioned unemployment impacting themselves or a partner, predominantly in the restaurant industry. Table 1 Interview domains, questions, and probes related to material hardship and stress around infant care during COVID-19 a Question informed by the Covid-19 Exposure and Family Impact Survey (CEFIS) [19] b Question informed by the Medical Outcomes Study Social Support Scale [20] c Question informed by Food Security Module [21] d Question informed by Everyday Discrimination Scale [ Broadly, we found that although the COVID-19 pandemic heightened overall family hardship (Theme 1) and altered daily infant routines with developmental consequences (Theme 2), families developed coping mechanisms in response to material hardship and stress (Theme 3). Tables 3, 4, and 5 display example quotations (Q) by theme and are numbered consecutively. Mothers described increased household material hardship and resultant psychosocial stress (Table 3) . Economic recession impacted families through job loss (Q1, Q2) and fluctuating prices of everyday goods (Q3, Q4), "It was difficult to buy powdered milk, and the prices continued to fluctuate." One mother recounted how she used to discard old vegetables and expressed a stressful sentiment where she "didn't dare to waste food anymore" (Q4). Travel restrictions disrupted transnational (US-China) childcare arrangements that some lower-income families relied on to accommodate extended work hours incompatible with accessible childcare resources. One mother stated: "Most of Chinese parents here are far from their parents. If they have a child, one of the couple has to stop working. My husband and I wanted to earn money, so we sent our baby back to China." Due to COVID-19 travel restrictions, families noted being delayed in bringing infants to China and subsequently delayed in obtaining employment (Q5, Q6). The emotional response to this delay was a tension between increased financial stress and relief at the opportunity to "raise our children by ourselves" (Q6). Relatedly, mothers spoke about delays in reuniting with older children currently in China (Q6, Q7). One mother communicated distress around her older toddler, a US citizen living in China with developmental delay, expressing urgency to "bring him back [to the US] as soon as possible." (Q7). Families reported a diversity of responses to inconsistent COVID-19 information from conflicting sources. Some mothers expressed increased uncertainty. One stated: "Her grandparents in China were very anxious as they heard from the news that the epidemic was out of control in the US. It made us very nervous about hospital conditions when the baby came… We didn't know if there were Covid-19 patients, if they would be close to me, what protective measures to take, or how to safely take the baby home." Other families mentioned mistrust, with one mother relaying her family's resolve to use personal protective equipment despite "mixed messages" from national and local political leadership (Q8). Experiences of racism in the community occurred while performing everyday activities. At an annual car inspection, one mother recounted an interaction where people "immediately zipped their uniforms and covered their faces" (Q9) upon seeing them. Leaving the house was "a challenge" because families felt they were treated differently and even shunned, as one mother recalled that people would rather "stand in a long line rather than stand behind us" (Q10). Protective measures permeated everyday parenting experiences from birth to toddlerhood. The consequences of these protective measures triggered increased stress and feelings of loss. Throughout infancy, mothers outlined challenges in daily infant care tasks with the incorporation of personal protective equipment. When leaving the house, there was a delicate tension between adequate protection and infant comfort when selecting protective gear (Q11). Mothers mentioned older infants refusing masks, and some mothers purchased small hats with face shields and kept backup cleaning methods such as hand wipes (Q12). When bringing infants to clinic for routine vaccinations, mothers detailed anxiety about whether the clinic was "clean enough or if her [the baby's] resistance was strong enough" (Q14). Mothers worried about the socio-emotional consequences of social distancing protective measures. For young infants, mothers quarantining at home felt bothered about the loss of outdoor experiences for their child and the dreariness of Uncertainty around protective measures due to media reports 8: There are just so many mixed messages… our president mentioned not to wear a mask, not to wear PPE [personal protective equipment]. We made the decision to use PPE before the president, before the mayor, before the governor mentioned that it was something that we needed to do… if we hadn't done what we felt was right for us… we could have been a part of the hundreds of thousands who are affected. Increased experiences of racism 9: Our car needed to have an annual inspection. We followed regular procedures to make an appointment and arrived at the inspection center. The inspectors were Americans. They were working normally before our arrival. But when they saw we were Chinese, they immediately zipped their uniforms and covered their faces. We could see that it was obviously because we were Chinese. 10: Since we were from China, we knew to take the virus seriously earlier than others so we took protective measures such as wearing masks before it was ordered by the government. However… people looked at us in a different way… they thought we were weird to wear a mask… which made us stressed. When we went shopping, people would stand in a long line rather than standing after us. So going out was also a challenge for us at that time. home confinement (Q15). To cope with material hardship and to manage resource scarcity, families stockpiled infant essentials, adapted family diets, and prioritized infant's dietary needs, "we can just eat whatever food, it's okay." Mothers discussed checking store inventory daily and stockpiling diapers in case of prolonged store closures (Q18). Families also stocked powdered milk over liquid due to its longer shelf life (Q19) and simplified their own diets to conserve resources, stating that "Our food lacked variety and our diet was quite simple." To mitigate feelings of stress, mothers gathered information from friends in China to be prepared because it was "just a matter of time that it was going to happen here" (Q20). To sustain relationships, families used video calls to communicate with geographically separated family members (Q21, Q22). Mothers also made efforts to feel gratitude 16: I'm afraid staying at home all day long is not good for a little baby… it may affect the baby's ability to interact with others, making them solitary. I'm also concerned that they form bad habits such as watching iPad or videos. 11 months 17: When we see people walk by, she really wants to say hi to them and all they can do is to say hi back… I know she wants to interact with other people. Like, when she hears other children playing in the neighborhood… she wants to go to that direction, but we can't because of the pandemic. (Q23) and maintain positive thoughts, with one stating: "I'm having a hard time finding a job… but it is what it is. There is no difficulty, which we cannot come over. Life goes on, anyway." In this sample of low-income Chinese American families with infants, we found persistent commentary about how COVID-19 economic and societal changes led to increased material hardships and stress. Incorporation of COVID-19 protective measures altered daily infant routines with developmental consequences. In response, families employed coping mechanisms to deal with material hardship and to mitigate stress. These findings: (1) inform health care delivery by emphasizing the need to address family hardships to prevent toxic stress during crisis; and (2) call attention to a particularly stressed population during this pandemic, one that is rarely researched. In the first theme, our findings around economic and societal disruption reinforced prior work around widening disparities in poverty-related social determinants of health during the pandemic [1, 9] . The language captured in our interviews emphasized the high level of stress families experienced. Mothers used specific dollar prices of household items when describing their pandemic experiences, extending prior evidence that lower-income respondents are more likely to know the exact cost of small items due to the heavy consequence of each dollar spent [24] . Our findings also depicted pandemic impacts on a transnational (US-China) childcare arrangement that some lowerincome Chinese American families rely on financially. This is the first study to our knowledge to show that the pandemic has delayed both separation and reunification for these families, signaling needs for increased childcare, developmental, and mental health support [25] for children separated from their parents longer than anticipated. Overall, these findings support the expansion of social needs screening [26] , particularly during crisis. In the wake of global events, prior evidence has identified increased experiences of racism in Muslim American adolescents after 9/11 [27] and already in Chinese American children during the COVID-19 pandemic [28] . Our findings broaden existing literature to illustrate the impact of community-level racism on families with infants. Efforts to combat the adverse impacts of racism on child health [29, 30] should include dynamic responses to triggering events that amplify racism against specific populations. In our second theme around COVID-19 protective measures on daily infant parenting, our findings describe the consequences of these infant care adjustments. Mothers of younger infants described the emotional burdens of home confinement on themselves, and mothers of older infants worried about how social distancing might stunt the infant's development. While evidence has identified increased parenting stress during COVID-19 [3] , our findings broaden this literature by identifying specific triggers of parenting stress. Pediatric primary care should tailor anticipatory guidance during this crisis by encouraging safe outdoor activities and Table 5 Theme 3-coping strategies ("we care more about the baby. We can just eat whatever food, it's okay.") Subtheme Quotations Coping with material hardship Stockpiling baby essentials 18: We stored many diapers with different sizes as we didn't know how long the epidemic would last… the baby was 8 pounds at birth so the newborn sized diapers could only be used for a couple of days… and size 1 became too small just after one month… it's difficult to control this… so we did our best. Adapting diets due to food shortage 19: We used to buy liquid milk… but it was too expensive and the baby needed one box per week. So we shifted to powdered milk. Coping with increased stress Gathering information in advance 20: There were news articles when this pandemic was happening in Wuhan. strengthening family-level interactions to promote socioemotional development. While national guidelines discourage face masks in children under 2 years old [31] , mothers discussed attempts to protect infants from COVID-19 exposure, describing creative methods such as hats with face shield attachments. While prior articles have described personal protective equipment in health care settings [32] , none to our knowledge describe personal protective equipment as part of infant daily routines. Families made extraordinary efforts to prevent COVID-19 transmission to their infants, including having parents working in high contact jobs live separately from their infants to reduce transmission risk. Prior evidence has emphasized the value of tactile bonding for parent-child interaction [33] , and pediatric primary care can facilitate evidence-based planning to prioritize family cohesion when parent separation is necessary for infection prevention. Our third theme found that families with infants processed crisis differently, with some describing resilient adaptations to accommodate crisis demands. Previous evidence has shown that low-income Hispanic immigrant families cope with food insecurity by prioritizing basics [34] . Our work broadens these findings to include other immigrant minority groups, as we found that our Chinese American families also described prioritizing infant essentials. Current literature from the pandemic has found that the ability to pay for fresh food is associated with higher incomes [35] . Our findings reinforce this quantitative evidence, with descriptions of how families avoided fresh vegetables with a shorter shelf life and switched from liquid to powdered milk. Finally, prior evidence has shown that household-level food insecurity does not correlate with child-level food insecurity [36] . Our study strengthens this work with depictions of parents shielding their infants from food insecurity by prioritizing their infant's dietary needs. Families used video calls to sustain relationships with family members and friends separated by geography and social distancing. Our findings represent uses of screen time that may enhance relationships, contributing to the ongoing re-evaluation of screen time guidelines for young children [37] . In addition, as our vulnerable population expressed comfort with virtual resources, this may have implications for the continued development of telehealth capabilities [10] , as well as classifying technology and internet access as a material hardship that screening programs could potentially mitigate. Limitations of this study include sampling and generalizability. Due to social distancing guidelines, our interviews were limited to mothers with smart phone access and sufficient literacy (both general and digital) to complete electronic consent, excluding the most marginalized families. Our intention was to interview immigrant, low-income, Chinese American families with infants to describe universal stressors related to the pandemic, but findings describe experiences specific to Chinese American populations. Future research should explore the generalizable themes of vulnerable families in crisis and unique challenges of rarely studied Asian American immigrant families by investigating longitudinal associations between material hardships, psychosocial stress, and infant outcomes in diverse populations. Low-income Chinese American mothers of infants described increased material hardships and stress in the setting of COVID-19 related economic and societal changes. The incorporation of COVID-19 protective measures permeated routines throughout infancy. Families of infants used coping strategies in response to material hardship and stress. Our results support: (1) expanding social needs screening during crisis; (2) including low-income Chinese Americans in efforts to achieve equitable allocation of support across diverse groups; and (3) tailoring anticipatory guidance to populations at risk, decreasing health disinformation, and strengthening support networks by leveraging virtual resources. Low-income immigrant Chinese-American families experienced material hardships and stress due to the economic and societal impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. These findings support expanding social needs screening, correcting disinformation, and strengthening support networks particularly during crisis. Measuring household experiences during the coronavirus pandemic Design and Operation of the 2020 Household Pulse Survey COVID-19 and parent-child psychological well-being. pediatrics Stress and parenting during the global COVID-19 pandemic The role of nutrition in brain development: the golden opportunity of the "first 1000 days Infant temperament, maternal personality, and parenting stress as contributors to infant developmental outcomes Food insecurity and obesogenic maternal infant feeding styles and practices in low-income families Material hardships and infant and toddler sleep duration in low-income hispanic families. Academic Pediatrics Impact of maternal depression on infant nutritional status and illness: a cohort study The detrimental impact of the COVID-19 crisis on health equity and social determinants of health Telemedicine and health disparities during COVID-19 Asian pacific policy and planning council Rimoin AW. seven reasons to care about racism and COVID-19 and seven things to do to stop it Educate, amplify, and focus to address COVID-19 misinformation The anxiety of being Asian American: hate crimes and negative biases during the COVID-19 pandemic A disastrous year for Brooklyn's Chinatown: 'it's just so hard taking action to improve Asian American health Making a global immigrant neighborhood: Brooklyn's sunset Park COVID-19 exposure and family impact survey (CEFIS) The MOS social support survey Household Food Security Survey Module Racial differences in physical and mental health: socio-economic status, stress and discrimination Comparison of estimated excess deaths in new York City during the COVID-19 and 1918 influenza pandemics Scarcity: why having too little means so much Separation and reunification: mental health of Chinese children affected by parental migration Screening for social determinants of health among children and families living in poverty: a guide for clinicians Discrimination against muslim American adolescents COVID-19 racism and mental health in Chinese American families. Pediatrics The impact of racism on child and adolescent health The pandemics of racism and COVID-19: danger and opportunity Center for Disease Control Sourcing personal protective equipment during the COVID-19 pandemic Mothers' and fathers' early tactile contact behaviors during triadic and dyadic parent-infant interactions immediately after birth and at 3-months postpartum: Implications for early care behaviors and intervention Food insecurity during pregnancy and breastfeeding by low-income Hispanic mothers Consumer food stockpiling behavior and willingness to pay for food reserves in COVID-19. Food Secur Food insecurity and dietary quality in US adults and children: a systematic review Applying harm reduction principles to address screen time in young children amidst the COVID-19 pandemic Publisher's Note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations We are thankful to Christina Tsai, MBA and Ventura Ho, LMSW for their valuable guidance in the development of this manuscript and for their service and commitment to this patient population. This work was supported by an Academic Pediatric Association Young Investigator Award (Nutrition in Underserved Settings); a pilot grant from the Center for the Study of Asian American Health at NYU Langone, and training grants HRSA T32HP22238 and CTSI NCATS 1UL 1TR001445.Funding This work was supported by an Academic Pediatric Association Young Investigator Award (Nutrition in Underserved Settings), a pilot grant from the Center for the Study of Asian American Health at NYU Langone, and training grants HRSA T32HP22238 and CTSI NCATS 1UL 1TR001445 (Dr. Duh-Leong). The funder/sponsor did not participate in the work.