COVID-19 大流行与社会不平等之间的综合问题。

Jonathan Santos Apolonio, Ronaldo Teixeira da Silva Júnior, Beatriz Rocha Cuzzuol, Glauber Rocha Lima Araújo, Hanna Santos Marques, Isadora de Souza Barcelos, Luana Kauany de Sá Santos, Luciano Hasimoto Malheiro, Vinícius Lima de Souza Gonçalves, Fabrício Freire de Melo
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摘要

尽管 2019 年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行已波及全球人口,但它对不同人群的影响却不尽相同。最脆弱的社区每天都面临着社会不平等,如卫生和个人防护用品匮乏、居住环境拥挤、慢性病高发等,这些社区接触和传播感染的风险较高,临床结果也较差。感染风险的升高可能与性别有关,这是因为在基本服务部门有更多的女性,以及前线和清洁专业人员,无论性别如何,她们接触病毒的机会最大。这种接触会使这些人产生害怕污染自己或家人的恐惧心理,同时也会给他们带来工作压力,而这两者都与这些人群出现精神障碍有关。此外,不卫生的生活条件和低下的社会经济地位、处于战争中的人口、先前存在的社会障碍以及种族因素,都会在接触病毒、获得医疗服务、COVID-19 管理和其他病症的管理等方面对这一流行病产生更大的影响。同时,非必要服务的关闭、工作岗位的丧失、家庭支出的增加等因素加剧了社会的脆弱性,影响了家庭经济。最后,COVID-19 大流行病对妇女健康的影响更大,因为它通过将妇女与社会生活隔离,增加受 害者与施暴者在一起的时间,为提高家庭暴力发生率创造了有利环境。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Syndemic aspects between COVID-19 pandemic and social inequalities.

Although the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has reached all over the world population, it has demonstrated a heterogeneous impact on different populations. The most vulnerable communities which coexist daily with the social inequalities like low access to hygiene and personal protection products, crowded residences, and higher levels of chronic diseases have a higher risk of contact and the spread of infection, beyond unfavorable clinical outcomes. The elevation of the risk of infection exposure can be related to gender due to the presence of a larger contingent of women in essential services, as well as frontline and cleaning professionals who regardless of gender have the greatest exposure to the virus. Such exposures can contribute to the development of fear of contaminating themselves or their family members associated also with the work stress, both of which are related to the emergence of mental disturbances in these populations. Furthermore, conditions of unsanitary living and low socioeconomic status, populations at war, pre-existing social barriers, and ethnicity have contributed to more impact of the pandemic both in the exposure to the virus and access to health services, COVID-19 management, and management of other pathologies. At the same time, factors such as the closing of non-essential services, the loss of jobs, and the increase in household spending aggravated the social vulnerabilities and impacted the family economy. Lastly, the COVID-19 pandemic contributed still more to the impact on women's health since it propitiated a favorable environment for increasing domestic violence rates, through the segregation of women from social life, and increasing the time of the victims with their aggressors.

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