Department of Biological Sciences, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH, United States.
Gund Institute for Environment, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT, United States.
PeerJ. 2022 Mar 21;10:e13007. doi: 10.7717/peerj.13007. eCollection 2022.
The United States' fishing and seafood industries experienced major shifts in consumer demand and social-distancing restrictions starting in March 2020, when the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic were unfolding. However, the specific effects on fishers and seafood processors are less well known. Fishermen and seafood workers are potentially at risk during a pandemic given existing tight working quarters, seasonal work, and long hours. To address these concerns, and given a lack of data on the sector, we reviewed news articles, scientific articles, and white papers to assess the various effects of COVID-19 on US seafood workers. Here, we show that most COVID-19 cases among seafood workers occurred during summer 2020 and during the beginning of 2021. These cases were documented across coastal areas, with Alaska experiencing the largest number of cases and outbreaks. Seafood workers were about twice as likely to contract COVID-19 as workers in other parts of the overall US food system. We also documented a number of indirect effects of the pandemic. New social-distancing restrictions and policies limited crew size, resulting in longer hours and more physical taxation. Because of changes in demand and the closure of some processing plants because of COVID-19 outbreaks, economic consequences of the pandemic were a primary concern for fishers and seafood workers, and safety measures allowed for seafood price variation and losses throughout the pandemic. We also highlight a number of inequities in COVID-19 responses within the seafood sector, both along racial and gender lines. All of these conditions point to the diverse direct and indirect effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on fishers and seafood workers. We hope this work sets the foundation for future work on the seafood sector in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic, improving the overall workplace, and collecting systematic social and economic data on workers.
2020 年 3 月,随着 COVID-19 大流行的早期阶段的展开,美国的渔业和海鲜产业经历了消费者需求和社交距离限制的重大转变。然而,渔民和海鲜加工者所受到的具体影响则不太为人所知。由于现有的工作空间紧张、季节性工作和长时间工作,渔民和海鲜工人在大流行期间可能面临风险。为了解决这些担忧,并且鉴于该行业缺乏数据,我们审查了新闻文章、科学文章和白皮书,以评估 COVID-19 对美国海鲜工人的各种影响。在这里,我们表明,大多数海鲜工人的 COVID-19 病例发生在 2020 年夏季和 2021 年初。这些病例记录在沿海地区,阿拉斯加报告的病例和疫情最多。海鲜工人感染 COVID-19 的可能性是美国整体食品系统其他部门工人的两倍。我们还记录了大流行的一些间接影响。新的社交距离限制和政策限制了船员规模,导致工作时间延长和身体负担加重。由于需求的变化和一些加工厂因 COVID-19 疫情关闭,大流行对渔民和海鲜工人的经济后果是主要关注点,安全措施允许海鲜价格在整个大流行期间波动和损失。我们还强调了海鲜行业内 COVID-19 应对措施存在的一些不平等现象,包括种族和性别方面。所有这些情况都表明 COVID-19 大流行对渔民和海鲜工人产生了多样化的直接和间接影响。我们希望这项工作为未来与 COVID-19 大流行有关的海鲜行业工作奠定基础,改善整体工作场所,并收集工人的系统社会和经济数据。