Disrupting global commitments to eradicate poverty and hunger: Covid-19 and its effects on adolescent physical and mental health in Jordan and Palestine

B. A. Abu Hamad, N. Jones, Eric D. Neumeister, Agnieszka M. Małachowska
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Abstract

Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) 1 and 2 aim to eradicate poverty and hunger in all their forms. However, the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic and subsequent lockdowns has disrupted progress toward achieving these goals. Despite considerable attention to the effects of the pandemic on poverty and food insecurity, there has been much less attention to the experiences of forcibly displaced adolescents during Covid-19 lockdown measures. This article addresses this evidence lacuna by drawing on mixed-methods data collected through phone-based surveys (n = 4,319) and in-depth qualitative interviews (n = 191) carried out in 2020 with adolescents (aged 12–19 years) from host and refugee communities in Jordan and Palestine. We also examine whether social protection has been able to mitigate the worst effects of food and economic insecurity on adolescents from host and refugee communities. Descriptive and inferential analysis of the quantitative data was conducted using Stata 16. The qualitative interviews were recorded, transcribed, and thematically coded using MAXQDA 12 software. We found that a significant proportion of adolescents experienced reduced diet diversity and food insecurity during the Covid-19 lockdown in autumn 2020 in both Jordan and Palestine. Adolescents with the worst economic and food security outcomes also had poorer self-reported physical health, lower resiliency scores, and higher levels of anxiety and depression. In Palestine, social protection measures contributed less to mitigating the negative consequences of the pandemic, whereas in Jordan—largely due to higher transfer amounts—social protection was more significant in mitigating these negative health and well-being consequences. Priority actions for getting adolescent-related SDGs back on track include scaling up emergency-responsive and age- and gender-sensitive social protection, especially for the most disadvantaged young people, including adolescents with disabilities, married girls, adolescents out of school, and young people from refugee households living in host communities, where packages of support are typically more disparate.
破坏消除贫困和饥饿的全球承诺:2019冠状病毒病及其对约旦和巴勒斯坦青少年身心健康的影响
可持续发展目标1和2旨在消除一切形式的贫困和饥饿。然而,2019冠状病毒病大流行的爆发和随后的封锁破坏了实现这些目标的进展。尽管人们相当关注疫情对贫困和粮食不安全的影响,但在2019冠状病毒病封锁措施期间,被迫流离失所的青少年的经历却少得多。本文利用混合方法收集的数据,通过电话调查(n = 4,319)和深度定性访谈(n = 191)收集数据,解决了这一证据空白,访谈对象是来自约旦和巴勒斯坦收容社区和难民社区的青少年(12-19岁)。我们还研究了社会保护是否能够减轻食物和经济不安全对收容社区和难民社区青少年的最坏影响。使用Stata 16对定量数据进行描述性和推断性分析。使用MAXQDA 12软件对定性访谈进行记录、转录和主题编码。我们发现,在2020年秋季约旦和巴勒斯坦的Covid-19封锁期间,很大一部分青少年的饮食多样性减少,粮食不安全。经济和食品安全状况最差的青少年自我报告的身体健康状况也较差,恢复能力得分较低,焦虑和抑郁水平较高。在巴勒斯坦,社会保护措施对减轻这一大流行病的消极后果的贡献较小,而在约旦————主要是由于较高的转移数额————社会保护在减轻这些消极的健康和福祉后果方面的作用更大。使与青少年相关的可持续发展目标重回正轨的优先行动包括,加强对紧急情况的响应以及对年龄和性别问题有敏感认识的社会保护,特别是针对处境最不利的年轻人,包括残疾青少年、已婚女孩、失学青少年以及生活在收容社区的难民家庭的年轻人,在这些社区,一揽子支持通常更加不同。
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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