Assistant Scientist, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, 615 N Wolfe St, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Scientist, Department of Sexual and Reproductive Health Research, UNDP/UNFPA/UNICEF/WHO/World Bank Human Reproductive Programme, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland.
Sex Reprod Health Matters. 2023 Dec;31(1):2187170. doi: 10.1080/26410397.2023.2187170.
COVID-19 has caused profound health, social, educational and economic devastation around the world, especially among the lives of adolescents in low- and middle-income countries. This paper looks at a wide array of outcomes impacting adolescents' daily lives including health (mental, physical, sexual and reproductive health, vaccine perceptions and overlap between these topics), social relationships (family and peer), education and socio-economic disparities. Both scientific and grey literature between December 2019 and February 2022 were sought from PubMed, Google Scholar and organisations conducting research among adolescents, and coded. A total of 89 articles were included, 73% of which were peer-reviewed; 37% of the articles were from WHO's Western Pacific region; 62% of the articles were cross-sectional; 75% were quantitative. Three major topics emerged in more than half the articles: mental health (72%), education (61%) and socio-economic ramifications (55%). However, there were regional differences in topics and many of them overlapped. The results indicate that, where there has been research, almost all findings have been linked to worse mental health during the pandemic. Overall, remote education was seen as a negative experience. The ramification of school closures on future aspirations, in particular early school leaving, highlights the importance of prioritising education during future pandemics based on the situation within the country. Gender and other disparities have made marginalised adolescents vulnerable to the economic ramifications of containment measures. Given the risks identified, there is a pressing need to put adolescents at the centre of establishing priorities for their health agenda for post-pandemic recovery.
COVID-19 给全世界造成了严重的健康、社会、教育和经济灾难,尤其是在中低收入国家的青少年生活中。本文探讨了影响青少年日常生活的广泛结果,包括健康(心理健康、身体健康、性健康和生殖健康、疫苗认知以及这些主题之间的重叠)、社会关系(家庭和同伴)、教育和社会经济差距。从 2019 年 12 月至 2022 年 2 月,在 PubMed、Google Scholar 和从事青少年研究的组织中搜索了科学文献和灰色文献,并对其进行了编码。共纳入 89 篇文章,其中 73%为同行评议;37%的文章来自世卫组织西太平洋区域;62%的文章为横断面研究;75%为定量研究。超过一半的文章中出现了三个主要主题:心理健康(72%)、教育(61%)和社会经济影响(55%)。然而,不同地区的主题存在差异,其中许多主题是重叠的。研究结果表明,在有研究的地方,几乎所有发现都与大流行期间心理健康状况恶化有关。总体而言,远程教育被视为一种负面体验。学校关闭对未来抱负的影响,特别是过早辍学,凸显了在未来大流行期间根据国内情况优先考虑教育的重要性。性别和其他差距使边缘化青少年容易受到遏制措施的经济影响。鉴于已经确定的风险,迫切需要将青少年置于制定其大流行后恢复健康议程优先事项的中心位置。