新冠肺炎刺激计划是否减轻了与疫情相关的失业对健康的负面影响?对大流行病第一年全球证据的系统回顾。

0 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Courtney L McNamara, Virginia Kotzias, Clare Bambra, Ronald Labonté, David Stuckler
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引用次数: 0

摘要

社会保护可以缓冲失业对健康的负面影响。新冠肺炎大流行期间推出的刺激方案是否减轻了失业对健康的潜在危害?我们对疫情第一年失业对健康的影响进行了系统审查。我们搜索了三个电子数据库,确定了49项纳入研究。三项基于美国的研究发现,刺激计划减轻了失业对粮食安全和心理健康的影响。此外,当他们得到报酬时,休假似乎还能减少负面影响。然而,尽管实施了大规模的刺激计划来减少经济危害,但我们观察到一个明显的模式,即失业与负面影响密切相关,特别是对心理健康、生活质量和粮食安全。我们还观察到提示性证据表明,与新冠肺炎相关的失业与虐待儿童、牙齿健康恶化和慢性病预后不佳有关。总的来说,尽管我们确实发现证据表明,收入支持政策似乎有助于保护人们免受疫情相关失业对健康的负面影响,但它们不足以完全抵消对健康的威胁。未来的研究应确定如何确保在流行病和经济衰退期间充分获得和慷慨提供社会保护计划。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Have COVID-19 Stimulus Packages Mitigated the Negative Health Impacts of Pandemic-Related Job Losses? A Systematic Review of Global Evidence from the First Year of the Pandemic.

Have COVID-19 Stimulus Packages Mitigated the Negative Health Impacts of Pandemic-Related Job Losses? A Systematic Review of Global Evidence from the First Year of the Pandemic.

Have COVID-19 Stimulus Packages Mitigated the Negative Health Impacts of Pandemic-Related Job Losses? A Systematic Review of Global Evidence from the First Year of the Pandemic.

Have COVID-19 Stimulus Packages Mitigated the Negative Health Impacts of Pandemic-Related Job Losses? A Systematic Review of Global Evidence from the First Year of the Pandemic.

Social protection can buffer the negative impacts of unemployment on health. Have stimulus packages introduced during the COVID-19 pandemic mitigated potential harms to health from unemployment? We performed a systematic review of the health effects of job loss during the first year of the pandemic. We searched three electronic databases and identified 49 studies for inclusion. Three United States-based studies found that stimulus programs mitigated the impact of job loss on food security and mental health. Furloughs additionally appeared to reduce negative impacts when they were paid. However, despite the implementation of large-scale stimulus packages to reduce economic harms, we observed a clear pattern that job losses were nevertheless significantly associated with negative impacts, particularly on mental health, quality of life, and food security. We also observe suggestive evidence that COVID-related job loss was associated with child maltreatment, worsening dental health, and poor chronic disease outcomes. Overall, although we did find evidence that income-support policies appeared to help protect people from the negative health consequences of pandemic-related job loss, they were not sufficient to fully offset the threats to health. Future research should ascertain how to ensure adequate access to and generosity of social protection programs during epidemics and economic downturns.

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