Population Council, Washington, District of Columbia.
Independent Consultant, Mexico City, Mexico.
J Adolesc Health. 2023 Nov;73(5):820-829. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2023.06.016. Epub 2023 Aug 23.
Studies have documented diverse adverse effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on young people's lives-for instance on mental health, education/employment prospects, and intrafamily violence. We sought to generate much-needed evidence regarding whether, and which, young people are experiencing multiple intersecting effects.
Data come from cross-sectional surveys with young people ages 15-25 years in Mexico (nationwide, n = 55,692), Kenya (four counties, n = 2,750), and India (two states, n = 3,537), collected from late 2020 to early 2022. We used latent class analysis to identify subgroups based on multiple adverse effects, then examined associations between these subgroups and COVID-19 infections/family deaths, and sociodemographic characteristics.
We found prevalent adverse impacts overall and two distinct subgroups in each country-one experiencing higher levels of all impacts, such as on mental health (44%-78% across countries), education/employment (22%-84%), intrafamily violence (22%-49%), and friendships (66%-86%). This subgroup comprised 40% of the sample in Mexico, 25% in Kenya, and 35% in India. In multivariate analyses, this group consistently had greater odds of experiencing COVID-19-related infections and deaths of loved ones. They were more likely socioeconomically disadvantaged, older, urban residents. Associations with other characteristics were country-specific.
This study provides novel cross-country evidence that a subgroup of young people has experienced intersecting adverse impacts of COVID-19 on their lives. Findings also confirm prior evidence of multiple elevated vulnerabilities in general. Expanded provision of multiple layers of support is required, particularly for the most vulnerable subgroup, as are multi-sectoral policies and interventions to prevent intersectional effects in future times of crisis.
有研究记录了 COVID-19 大流行对年轻人生活的多种不利影响,例如对心理健康、教育/就业前景和家庭内暴力的影响。我们试图就年轻人是否正在经历多种交叉影响,以及哪些年轻人正在经历这些影响,提供急需的证据。
数据来自于 2020 年末至 2022 年初在墨西哥(全国范围内,n=55692)、肯尼亚(四个县,n=2750)和印度(两个邦,n=3537)进行的针对 15-25 岁年轻人的横断面调查。我们使用潜在类别分析根据多种不良影响来确定亚组,然后检查这些亚组与 COVID-19 感染/家庭死亡以及社会人口特征之间的关联。
我们发现总体上存在普遍的不利影响,并且在每个国家都有两个不同的亚组——一个亚组经历了更高水平的所有影响,例如心理健康(44%-78%,各国之间)、教育/就业(22%-84%)、家庭内暴力(22%-49%)和友谊(66%-86%)。这个亚组占墨西哥样本的 40%,肯尼亚的 25%,印度的 35%。在多变量分析中,这个群体经历 COVID-19 相关感染和亲人死亡的可能性一直更大。他们更有可能在社会经济上处于不利地位,年龄更大,是城市居民。与其他特征的关联因国家而异。
本研究提供了新颖的跨国证据,表明一部分年轻人经历了 COVID-19 对其生活的多方面不利影响。研究结果还证实了一般情况下存在多种高风险脆弱性的先前证据。需要扩大提供多个层面的支持,特别是对于最脆弱的亚组,同时还需要制定多部门政策和干预措施,以防止未来危机时期出现交叉影响。