COVID-19大流行对老年人的持续影响。

IF 2 3区 社会学 Q2 GERONTOLOGY
Journal of Aging & Social Policy Pub Date : 2024-11-01 Epub Date: 2024-12-10 DOI:10.1080/08959420.2024.2440824
Edward Alan Miller, Elizabeth Simpson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

COVID-19大流行的迅速爆发给全球老年人、护理人员和护理机构带来了多方面的挑战。旨在保护老年人免受COVID-19严重疾病和死亡的广泛政策——包括优先为老年人接种疫苗、强制卫生保健工作者接种疫苗以及严格的隔离措施——在缓解这些后果方面取得了一些成功。然而,老年人继续承担着这些最严重后果的风险负担。此外,保护老年人的一些早期努力,往往是在护理设施和社区内采取极端隔离措施,对老年人及其护理和服务网络产生了意想不到的健康和心理社会影响,并揭示了世界各地卫生和社会政策中存在的系统性年龄歧视。本期《老龄化与社会政策杂志》特刊汇编了在大流行高峰期期间和之后进行的关于即时应对工作影响的研究,同时深入研究了不同人口群体和组织的长期差异影响。各国政府、机构和老龄服务组织将受益于充分考虑所吸取的经验教训并将其纳入未来的应急工作。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Continuing Implications of the COVID-19 Pandemic for Older Adults.

The rapid onset of the COVID-19 pandemic presented a multi-faceted challenge to older adults, carers, and care institutions globally. A wide range of policies aimed at protecting older adults from serious illness and death from COVID-19 - including prioritizing vaccination for older adults, mandating vaccination among health care workers, and stringent isolation measures - achieved some success in mitigating these outcomes. However, older adults continue to bear the burden of risk for these most severe outcomes. Additionally, some early efforts to protect older adults, often via extreme isolation measures both within care facilities and in the community, yielded unanticipated health and psychosocial impacts on older adults and care and service networks and revealed systemic ageism in health and social policies worldwide. This special issue of the Journal of Aging & Social Policy compiles research conducted both during and after the height of the pandemic on the impacts of immediate response efforts, while delving into the longer-term differential effects across population subgroups and organizations. Governments, agencies, and aging services organizations will benefit from fully considering lessons learned and incorporating them into future emergency response efforts.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
13.00
自引率
3.90%
发文量
57
期刊介绍: The Journal of Aging & Social Policy offers a platform for insightful contributions from an international and interdisciplinary group of policy analysts and scholars. It provides an in-depth examination and analysis of critical phenomena that impact aging and the development and implementation of programs for the elderly from a global perspective, with a broad scope that encompasses not only the United States but also regions including Europe, the Middle East, Australia, Latin America, Asia, and the Asia-Pacific rim. The journal regularly addresses a wide array of issues such as long-term services and supports, home- and community-based care, nursing-home care, assisted living, long-term care financing, financial security, employment and training, public and private pension coverage, housing, transportation, health care access, financing, and quality, family dynamics, and retirement. These topics are of significant importance to the field of aging and social policy, reflecting the journal's commitment to presenting a comprehensive view of the challenges and solutions related to aging populations around the world.
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