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Economic vulnerability and poor service delivery made it more difficult for shack-dwellers to comply with COVID-19 restrictions: The impracticability and inequitable burden of universal/unstratified public health policies.
George TH Ellison IV; Robert B Mattes; Hanan Rhoma; Thea De Wet.
Afiliação
  • George TH Ellison IV; University of Central Lancashire
  • Robert B Mattes; University of Strathclyde
  • Hanan Rhoma; University of Leeds
  • Thea De Wet; University of Johannesburg
Preprint em Inglês | medRxiv | ID: ppmedrxiv-22273499
ABSTRACT
In South Africa, demand for housing close to viable/sustained sources of employment has far outstripped supply; and the size of the population living in temporary structures/shacks (and in poorly serviced informal settlements) has continued to increase. While such dwellings and settlements pose a number of established risks to the health of their residents, the present study aimed to explore whether they might also undermine the potential impact of regulations intended to safeguard public health, such as the stringent lockdown restrictions imposed to curb the spread of COVID-19 in 2020 and 2021. Using a representative sample of 1,381 South African households surveyed in May-June 2021, the present study found that respondents in temporary structures/shacks were more likely to report non-compliance (or difficulty in complying) with lockdown restrictions when compared to those living in traditional/formal houses/flats/rooms/hostels (OR1.61; 95%CI1.06-2.45). However, this finding was substantially attenuated and lost precision following adjustment for preceding sociodemographic and economic determinants of housing quality (adjusted OR1.20; 95%CI0.78-1.87). Instead, respondents were far more likely to report non-compliance (or difficulty in complying) with COVID-19 lockdown restrictions if their dwellings lacked private/indoor toilet facilities (adjusted OR1.56; 95%CI1.08,2.22) or they were Black/African, young, poorly educated and under-employed (regardless of their socioeconomic position, or whether they resided in temporary structures/shacks, respectively). Restrictions imposed to safeguard public health need to be more sensitively designed to accommodate the critical role that poverty and inadequate service delivery play in limiting the ability of residents living in temporary structures/shacks and inadequately serviced dwellings/settlements to comply. [250/250 words] Significance of the main findingsO_LISouth Africans living in temporary structures/shacks are more likely to be poorly educated and under-employed; with fewer assets and limited access to basic household services. C_LIO_LIPoverty and inadequate service delivery were more important determinants of compliance with COVID-19 restrictions than housing quality. C_LIO_LIIn the absence of improvements in economic circumstances and the delivery of basic household services, restrictions imposed to safeguard public health need to be more sensitively designed to take account of the structural barriers to compliance experienced by households where poverty and/or inadequate service delivery limit their ability to stay at home; maintain hygiene; and/or practice social distancing. [100/100 words] C_LI O_QD"This idea of the "humbling pandemic"1 does not hold for people whose lives depend on informal economy and movement in the face of heavy restrictions on their respective activities such as... street hustle and domestic work. Therefore, the pandemic response - which employs tactics that come to determine how lives are to be lived - can be seen as an exacerbator of inequalities, by the hands of which precarious circumstances of living are a larger threat than the risk of infection"2 Stefan Ogedengbe (2021 94)3 C_QD
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Texto completo: Disponível Coleções: Preprints Base de dados: medRxiv Tipo de estudo: Estudo observacional / Estudo prognóstico / Pesquisa qualitativa Idioma: Inglês Ano de publicação: 2022 Tipo de documento: Preprint
Texto completo: Disponível Coleções: Preprints Base de dados: medRxiv Tipo de estudo: Estudo observacional / Estudo prognóstico / Pesquisa qualitativa Idioma: Inglês Ano de publicação: 2022 Tipo de documento: Preprint
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