During the COVID-19 pandemic, people from ethnic minority backgrounds faced unique mental health challenges. A new review looked at how they handled the stress. They found that individuals used personal tools like faith and emotional regulation. Families and local communities also stepped in to provide support. Digital tools helped connect people who felt isolated. These actions formed a multi-tiered response to the crisis.
However, the research highlighted a major problem. Most studies focused on what individuals and families could do. There was a critical gap in understanding how larger systems could help. The review noted a lack of data on structural and policy-driven interventions. This means we do not know enough about how government rules or community governance can protect mental health.
This finding matters for public health leaders. It shows that relying only on personal coping strategies is not enough. Future efforts must include integrated frameworks that address systemic issues. We need to build policies that reduce mental health inequities before the next emergency hits. Without these changes, vulnerable groups will continue to suffer alone.