Research Program on Global Health and Human Rights, Human Rights Institute, University of Connecticut, 405 Babbidge Road, U-1205, Storrs, CT, 06269, USA.
Department of Anthropology, University of Connecticut, 354 Mansfield Road, Unit 1176, Storrs, CT, 06226, USA.
Cult Med Psychiatry. 2024 Mar;48(1):4-22. doi: 10.1007/s11013-024-09848-6. Epub 2024 Mar 9.
The COVID-19 crisis has taken a significant toll on the mental health of many students around the globe. In addition to the traumatic effects of loss of life and livelihood within students' families, students have faced other challenges, including disruptions to learning and work; decreased access to health care services; emotional struggles associated with loneliness and social isolation; and difficulties exercising essential rights, such as rights to civic engagement, housing, and protection from violence. Such disruptions negatively impact students' developmental, emotional, and behavioral health and wellbeing and also become overlaid upon existing inequities to generate intersectional effects. With these findings in mind, this special issue investigates how COVID-19 has affected the mental health and wellbeing of high school and college students in diverse locations around the world, including the United States, Mexico, Brazil, China, and South Africa. The contributions collected here analyze data collected through the Pandemic Journaling Project, a combined research study and online journaling platform that ran on a weekly basis from May 2020 through May 2022, along with complementary projects and using additional research methods, such as semi-structured interviews and autobiographical writing by students. The collection offers a nuanced, comparative window onto the diverse struggles that students and educators experienced at the height of the pandemic and considers potential solutions for addressing the long-term impacts of COVID-19. It also suggests a potential role for journaling in promoting mental wellbeing among youth, particularly in the Global South.
新冠疫情危机给全球许多学生的心理健康造成了重大影响。除了学生家庭中生命和生计损失带来的创伤性影响外,学生们还面临着其他挑战,包括学习和工作中断;获得医疗保健服务的机会减少;与孤独和社会隔离相关的情绪斗争;以及行使基本权利(如公民参与、住房和免受暴力侵害的权利)的困难。这些干扰对学生的发展、情感和行为健康以及幸福感产生负面影响,并与现有的不平等现象叠加,产生交叉影响。考虑到这些发现,本期特刊调查了新冠疫情如何影响全球不同地点(包括美国、墨西哥、巴西、中国和南非)的高中生和大学生的心理健康和幸福感。本专题集收集的论文分析了通过“疫情日记项目”收集的数据,该项目是一项结合研究和在线日记平台的研究,从 2020 年 5 月至 2022 年 5 月每周进行一次,同时还有其他补充项目和使用了其他研究方法,如学生的半结构化访谈和自传写作。该专题集提供了一个细致入微、比较性的视角,了解了学生和教育工作者在疫情高峰期所经历的各种挣扎,并考虑了应对新冠疫情长期影响的潜在解决方案。它还暗示了日记在促进青年心理健康方面的潜在作用,特别是在全球南方。