| Literature DB >> 36078249 |
Peng Cui1, Zhiyu Dong1, Xin Yao1, Yifei Cao1, Yifan Sun1, Lan Feng1.
Abstract
It has been more than two years since the outbreak of the COVID-19 epidemic at the end of 2019. Many scholars have introduced the "resilience" concept into COVID-19 prevention and control to make up for the deficiencies in traditional community governance. This study analyzed the progress in research on social resilience, which is an important component of community resilience, focusing on the current literature on the impact of social resilience on COVID-19, and proposed a generalized dimension to integrated previous relevant literature. Then, VOSviewer was used to visualize and analyze the current progress of research on social resilience. The PRISMA method was used to collate studies on social resilience to the pandemic. The result showed that many current policies are effective in controlling COVID-19, but some key factors, such as vulnerable groups, social assistance, and socioeconomics, affect proper social functioning. Some scholars have proposed effective solutions to improve social resilience, such as establishing an assessment framework, identifying priority inoculation groups, and improving access to technology and cultural communication. Social resilience to COVID-19 can be enhanced by both external interventions and internal regulation. Social resilience requires these two aspects to be coordinated to strengthen community and urban pandemic resilience.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; social resilience; systematic literature review; urban communities
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36078249 PMCID: PMC9517785 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph191710532
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Figure 1Visualization analysis of social resilience.
Figure 2Flow diagram of the literature search and study selection.
Policies related to social resilience to COVID-19.
| Related Policies | Effects (Positive +/Negative −) | Citation |
|---|---|---|
| Social Distancing Policy | (+) Internal regulatory policy restrictions at the national level have inhibited the spread of COVID-19. | [ |
| Mitigation Actions | (+) Mitigation policies can effectively control the spread of the epidemic | [ |
| National Prevention Policies | (+) Policies (masks, home orders, congregation restrictions, social distance) had a significantly lower average mortality rate for low resilience communities. | [ |
| (+) Good political communication helps to improve political messages and thus social resilience. | [ | |
| COVID-19 policies applied to disabled people | (−) Policy responses should focus on social resilience and disabling barriers that force disabled people into states of vulnerability. | [ |
| COVID-19 vaccination | (−) Vaccination resources are allocated with attention to community-level adaptation to ensure rationalization of vaccine supply. | [ |
| Urban medical allocation policy | (−) Government action has resulted in an uneven distribution of the quality impact of access to the COVID-19 due to social inequalities at the individual and municipal levels. | [ |
| Non-pharmacological intervention policies | (−) Many of these measures are not feasible for people living in socially maladjusted areas. | [ |
| Stay-at-home | (−) Difficulties in complying with policies during “stay-at-home” periods are associated with less social resilience, maintaining it for a long time will have a negative impact on the psychology of the public. | [ |
| The lockdowns | (−) COVID-19 exposed Australia’s systemic, demographic, and spatial vulnerabilities, while embargo policies led to reduced economic resilience. | [ |
The recommendations and measures of social resilience to COVID-19.
| 4R | Recommendations and Measures | Citation |
|---|---|---|
| Rapidity | Improve current “stay-at-home” policies that can have a psychiatric impact on community residents | [ |
| Redundancy | Accessibility measures for COVID-19 patients need additional medical resources to improve | [ |
| Resourcefulness | A strong system of local institutions working in concert with the state is needed to build a community-based, resilience-centered social resilience framework, a district-level CPVI, a conceptual model of CHASMS | [ |
| Robustness | Improving coverage of emergency treatment response calls for low social resilience | [ |
The factors influencing social resilience to COVID-19.
| Influencing Factors and Percentage | Main Conclusions | Citation |
|---|---|---|
| Vulnerable Groups (33%) | Vulnerable groups as a key factor affecting social resilience during COVID-19 | [ |
| Spatial Heterogeneity (27%) | Spatial heterogeneity of social resilience indicators (lower social resilience and lack of policies) was highly correlated with the spread of COVID-19 | [ |
| Social Psychological (13%) | The spread of COVID-19 has a negative psychological impact on people and seriously af-fects social resilience | [ |
| Socioeconomic (13%) | Socioeconomic factors are strong predictors of COVID-19 outcomes, with housing density, the Municipal Human Development Index (MHDI) and SVI being the most influential fac-tors, and class segregation being a greater threat to the social and economic resilience | [ |
| Social Ties (7%) | Resilient communities have much lower case-fatality rates of COVID-19, and the most- and least-resilient groups in the community are prone to interact with communities similar to theirs, with increased mortality once the disease invades | [ |
| Social Capital (3%) | Social capital helps residents adopt new behavioral norms | [ |
| Social Assistance (4%) | Patients with poor social resilience were sicker, but with no difference in mortality or discharge disposition after hospital admission | [ |
Division of research perspectives of social resilience to COVID-19.
| Levels | Dimensions | Indicators | Explanations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention Angle | Hard strength | Development Capacity | Social development adjustments affected by COVID-19 |
| Capital | The current economic state, ensuring redundancy in the economic aspects of resilience | ||
| Policy Strength | Scope of policy enactment and effectiveness of governance | ||
| Regulatory Capability | The extent to which policy regulates and can intervene | ||
| Infrastructure Status | State and distribution of the social own infrastructure | ||
| Medical Coverage | Social paramedical aid available | ||
| Vaccinations | Vaccination status and distribution | ||
| Soft Power | Public Assistance | Distribution of community benefit organizations and other service categories | |
| Neighborhood | The degree of harmony and organization among neighbors | ||
| Trust Level | The degree of trust citizens has in a policy reflects the degree of willingness to implement it | ||
| Cultural Resonance | Some positive customs that have a cohesive effect | ||
| Security and Equity | Equitable and secure human survival | ||
| Internal Regulation | Natural Conditions | Natural Conditions | The physical geography in which the community itself is located |
| Human conditions | Living Systems | The impact of the social labor production and living conditions | |
| Education level | Percentage of population with educational attainment | ||
| Population Density | The average number of people on a certain unit of land at a certain time | ||
| Percentage of vulnerable Groups | Percentage of vulnerable groups as a whole | ||
| Diseases | Whether the individual has been ill during the epidemic and whether he or she has had other prior medical conditions such as chronic diseases | ||
| Language Communication | A person’s language situation and ability to communicate properly with that community | ||
| Mental state | Psychological situation of individuals during COVID-19 |