| Literature DB >> 33194933 |
Kaymarlin Govender1, Richard Gregory Cowden2, Patrick Nyamaruze1, Russell Murray Armstrong1, Luann Hatane3.
Abstract
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has created extraordinary challenges and prompted remarkable social changes around the world. The effects of COVID-19 and the public health control measures that have been implemented to mitigate its impact are likely to be accompanied by a unique set of consequences for specific subpopulations living in low-income countries that have fragile health systems and pervasive social-structural vulnerabilities. This paper discusses the implications of COVID-19 and related public health interventions for children and young people living in Eastern and Southern Africa. Actionable prevention, care, and health promotion initiatives are proposed to attenuate the negative effects of the pandemic and government-enforced movement restrictions on children and young people.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Eastern and Southern Africa; children; health; well-being; young people
Year: 2020 PMID: 33194933 PMCID: PMC7604346 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2020.00504
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Summary of COVID-19 vulnerabilities and strategies for promoting well-being among children and young people in Eastern and Southern Africa.
| •Unsuppressed viral loads and low CD4 counts | •Improve self-efficacy to adopt COVID-19 prevention behaviors (e.g., restriction of movement measures, hand washing, social distancing) | •Support integrated community prevention, surveillance, and early detection of HIV/TB and SARS-CoV-2 by linking CYP to community social and health services | •Provide uninterrupted primary health care with intensified SARS-CoV-2 surveillance | •Increase budgets to ensure HIV, TB, and SARS-CoV-2 testing and treatment programs are stepped up and continued during lockdowns |
| Health complications of physical inactivity and restricted mobility | •Improve self-efficacy for engaging in appropriate physical activity within the confinements of regulated spaces | •Caregivers and communities to support children with developing routines that incorporate physical activity and regular meals | •Surveillance systems to monitor food shortages and health and nutrition needs of CYP | •Accommodate physical activity needs of CYP into stay-at-home orders or homebound policies, particularly for those without access to special equipment or who have limited space in the home to exercise |
| Psychological distress precipitated by confinement and fear of contracting SARS-CoV-2 | •Self-monitor psychological distress and seek appropriate support and services | •Support community outreach health workers with detecting mental health issues and delivering basic mental health services to families | •Where possible, use innovative ways to provide mental health support to people during lockdown periods (e.g., telemedicine, web-based counseling and wellness services, SMS, information through cross-platform messaging and voice-over internet protocols [e.g., WhatsApp]) | •Mental health services should be classified as an essential primary health service |
| Immunization programming disruptions | •Caregivers to ensure that children are vaccinated in accordance with recommended immunization schedules | •Community outreach/door-to-door immunization for children during lockdowns | •Universal immunization should be integrated into the COVID-19 response and considered an essential service | •Accelerate research on the development of a safe and effective SARS-CoV-2 vaccine |
| •Caregivers to ensure neonatal BCG vaccination to be given to all infants in high TB burden settings | •Provide community-wide education on vaccination guidelines and immunization schedules | •Ensure equitable access to COVID-19 vaccine once available | ||
| Learning during school closures | •Improve basic skills needed to access online and distance learning modalities | •Schools to consider ways of making learning materials easily accessible to students | NA | •Implement a national policy to mitigate the immediate impact of school closures and facilitate continuity of education for all students through remote learning |
| Re-opening of schools | •Improve education on prevention, detection, management, and treatment of COVID-19 | •Support schools to institute and adhere to COVID-19 safety and risk mitigation measures | •Capacitate local health systems to be responsive to COVID-19 outbreaks in schools | •Decisions on re-opening of schools should consider context-specific issues in combination: SARS-CoV-2 epidemic trajectory among CYP, SARS-CoV-2 transmission rates, prevalence of severity of COVID-19 related illness and mortality rates among CYP, ongoing negative impacts on immunization programs, school feeding programs and other public health programs, capacity of schools to adhere to COVID-19 risk mitigation and safety measures, and evaluation of the benefits of classroom-based instruction vis-à-vis remote learning |
| Human rights violations | •Improve self-efficacy to access to helplines and self-help empowerment information | •Communities and local NGOs to ramp up information campaigns on monitoring and reporting of human rights violations during lockdowns | •During lockdowns, child protection services and workers must be designated as essential services and resourced to access and support children with age-appropriate services, safe e-education platforms, and cost-free child helplines for children to report the occurrence of abuse or violence | •Parliamentary process and civil society organizations to serve as “watch dogs” to monitor law enforcement misconduct and helping to ensure offenders are held accountable for acts of discrimination and violence |
| Financial and food insecurity of households | •Caregivers of households to monitor and report food shortages and lack of funds to purchase essentials (e.g., medicine, hygienic products) | •Communities and local NGOs need to support impoverished families with accessing social relief funds and food distribution programs | •Health workers to identify children at risk of hunger/malnutrition and support them through rapid linkage to community food distribution and feeding programs | •Increase government spending on social grants to improve household food security |
BCG, Bacille Calmette-Guérin; COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019; CYP, children and young people; NGO, non-governmental organization; SARS-CoV-2, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2; SMS, short message service; TB, tuberculosis; YPLHIV, young people living with HIV.