School of Health Studies, Faculty of Health Sciences, Western University, London, Canada.
Centre for Social Science Research, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
Psychol Health Med. 2022 Jan-Dec;27(sup1):193-218. doi: 10.1080/13548506.2022.2108084. Epub 2022 Oct 15.
Growing evidence documents the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on adolescents in East and Southern Africa. We present and explore the longitudinal health and development-related priorities and challenges of adolescent advisors in South Africa and Kenya, including prior to, and during the COVID-19 pandemic. Findings were co-generated with adolescent advisors in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa (n=15, ages 18-22 in 2019) and Kisumu, Kenya (n=16, ages 10-14 in 2020). Prior to COVID-19, adolescent advisors engaged in a participatory exercise to share and explore their health and development-related priorities and challenges in 2019 and 2020. During the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and 2021, members of the same groups shared their experiences, challenges and coping strategies in semi-structured telephone interviews (Eastern Cape: n=14, aged 19-23; Kisumu n=12, aged 11-16) and group-based remote participatory social media activities (n=27 activities with n=12 advisors, Eastern Cape). We thematically analysed COVID-19 activities, considering them alongside pre-pandemic priorities and challenges. Many of the health and development-related priorities and challenges identified prior to COVID-19 remained issues of concern during COVID-19. These included education; victimization and violence; teenage pregnancy; substance use; household tension, conflict and inadequate family and caregiver support; health and medication concerns (South Africa) and water and food shortages (Kenya). Other issues such as financial insecurity, mental health, and crime were strong themes that emerged during COVID-19, which were not directly reported as priorities prior. Although almost all of adolescent advisors' most pressing pandemic-related challenges were also priorities for them prior to COVID-19, these issues were often discussed as new, and caused by the onset of COVID-19. While demonstrating how COVID-19 has exacerbated pre-existing vulnerabilities, we also suggest that the pandemic may have brought about a new way for adolescents to make sense of, and articulate pre-existing challenges.
越来越多的证据表明,COVID-19 大流行对东非和南非的青少年产生了影响。我们介绍并探讨了南非和肯尼亚青少年顾问在大流行之前和期间的健康和发展相关的优先事项和挑战,包括 2019 年在南非东开普省(n=15,年龄 18-22 岁)和肯尼亚基苏木(n=16,年龄 10-14 岁)的青少年顾问。在 COVID-19 之前,青少年顾问参加了一项参与式活动,以分享和探讨他们在 2019 年和 2020 年的健康和发展相关的优先事项和挑战。在 2020 年和 2021 年的 COVID-19 大流行期间,同一组的成员在半结构化电话访谈中分享了他们的经验、挑战和应对策略(东开普省:n=14,年龄 19-23 岁;基苏木 n=12,年龄 11-16 岁)和基于群组的远程参与式社交媒体活动(n=27 次活动,n=12 名顾问,东开普省)。我们对 COVID-19 活动进行了主题分析,同时考虑到大流行前的优先事项和挑战。在 COVID-19 之前确定的许多与健康和发展相关的优先事项和挑战仍然是 COVID-19 期间关注的问题。这些问题包括教育;受害和暴力;少女怀孕;药物滥用;家庭紧张、冲突和缺乏家庭和照顾者支持;健康和药物问题(南非)以及水和食物短缺(肯尼亚)。其他问题,如金融不安全、心理健康和犯罪,是 COVID-19 期间出现的强烈主题,这些问题之前没有被直接报告为优先事项。尽管青少年顾问在大流行期间最紧迫的问题大多也是他们在 COVID-19 之前的优先事项,但这些问题往往被视为新问题,是 COVID-19 引发的。虽然这表明 COVID-19 加剧了先前存在的脆弱性,但我们也认为,大流行可能为青少年提供了一种新的方式来理解和表达先前存在的挑战。