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Socio-economic outcomes of COVID-19 on the marginalised: Who have taken the hardest hit?

This article aims to examine the socioeconomic outcomes of COVID-19 for socially marginalised people who are clients of social care organisations (e.g. people experiencing homelessness), and the factors influencing these outcomes. We tested the role of individual and socio-structural variables in de...

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Published in:International journal of disaster risk reduction 2023-07, Vol.93, p.103723, Article 103723
Main Authors: Siimsen, Ingeliis, Orru, Kati, Naevestad, Tor-Olav, Nero, Kristi, Olson, Alexandra, Kaal, Esta, Meyer, Sunniva Frislid
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c460t-1d70b54b2c64ffd4deab29802e6185138a629d25866bf4321b266a08b59534883
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container_title International journal of disaster risk reduction
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creator Siimsen, Ingeliis
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description This article aims to examine the socioeconomic outcomes of COVID-19 for socially marginalised people who are clients of social care organisations (e.g. people experiencing homelessness), and the factors influencing these outcomes. We tested the role of individual and socio-structural variables in determining socioeconomic outcomes based on a cross-sectional survey with 273 participants from eight European countries and 32 interviews and five workshops with managers and staff of social care organisations in ten European countries. 39% of the respondents agreed that the pandemic has had a negative effect on their income and access to shelter and food. The most common negative socio-economic outcome of the pandemic was loss of work (65% of respondents). According to multivariate regression analysis, variables such as being of a young age, being an immigrant/asylum seeker or residing in the country without documentation, living in your own home, and having (in)formal paid work as the main source of income are related to negative socio-economic outcomes following the COVID-19 pandemic. Factors such as individual psychological resilience and receiving social benefits as the main source of income tend to “protect” respondents from negative impacts. Qualitative results indicate that care organisations have been an important source of economic and psycho-social support, particularly significant in times of a huge surge in demand for services during the long-term crises of pandemic.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2023.103723
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subjects COVID-19
Homeless
Marginalised groups
Socioeconomic impacts
Vulnerability
title Socio-economic outcomes of COVID-19 on the marginalised: Who have taken the hardest hit?
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