COVID-19 and Persons With Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities: Implications for Future Policy, Practice, and Research.

IF 1.9 4区 医学 Q1 EDUCATION, SPECIAL
Amy S Hewitt, John G Smith, Liz Weintraub
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has been hard for everyone. For the estimated seven and a half million people in the United States who live with intellectual disability (Residential Information Systems Project, 2020), it has been very hard. Lives have been disrupted by lost jobs, lack of access to friends/family, and challenges finding enough staff to provide supports and needed healthcare. Studies have shown that people with IDD are at a much greater risk of getting COVID-19 and dying from it (Cuypers et al., 2020; Gleason et al., 2021; Kaye, 2021; Landes, Turk, & Ervin, 2020; Nygren & Lulinski, 2020). Without question, people with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) struggled as the COVID-19 pandemic began and as it has continued. Too many were isolated from friends and family for far too long. Too many were lonely and bored. Too many have not received the support they have needed during the pandemic. Far too many were denied treatment and far too many have died. As a nation we must reflect on what has happened and listen to people with IDD and their families about their experiences. This commentary reflects on the implications of COVID-19 for research, policy, and practice through the lens of people with IDD.

2019冠状病毒病与智力和发育障碍者:对未来政策、实践和研究的影响。
COVID-19大流行对每个人来说都是艰难的。对于美国估计有750万智障人士来说(住宅信息系统项目,2020年),这是非常困难的。人们的生活因失业、无法与朋友/家人联系以及难以找到足够的工作人员来提供支持和所需的医疗服务而受到影响。研究表明,缺乏症患者感染COVID-19并因此死亡的风险要大得多(Cuypers等人,2020;Gleason等人,2021;凯,2021;兰德斯,特克和欧文,2020;Nygren & Lulinski, 2020)。毫无疑问,随着COVID-19大流行的开始和持续,智力和发育障碍者(IDD)一直在苦苦挣扎。太多的人与朋友和家人隔离太久了。太多的人感到孤独和无聊。太多的人没有得到他们在大流行期间所需的支持。太多的人得不到治疗,太多的人已经死亡。作为一个国家,我们必须反思所发生的事情,倾听缺碘症患者及其家人的经历。本评论从缺碘症患者的角度思考2019冠状病毒病对研究、政策和实践的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
4.80%
发文量
47
期刊介绍: The American Journal on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (Print ISSN: 1944–7515; Online ISSN: 1944–7558) is published by the American Association on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities. It is a scientifi c, scholarly, and archival multidisciplinary journal for reporting original contributions of the highest quality to knowledge of intellectual disabilities, its causes, treatment, and prevention.
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