Who feels the heat of Corona Virus Impact?
During Neanderthal times…the women used to wait, upkeep the cave hoping the man would come back with a good hunt…come 21st century and the COVID-19 impact, Women is on the forefront staving off virus on one hand and keep the house running with huge responsibility resting on their tender shoulders. As per World Economic forum data (WEF)
- Women comprise the majority of health and social care workers, and are on the front lines of the fight against COVID-19.
- Mass school closures have particularly affected women because they still bear much of the responsibility for childcare and homecare.
- Women already do three-times as much unpaid care work than men – and caring for relatives with the virus adds to the burden.
Are men and women feeling the effects of the coronavirus differently?
Research from China suggests that while COVID-19 is infecting men and women in about equal numbers, women appear less likely to die from the virus than men. A study of some 44,600 people with COVID-19 from the Chinese Center for Disease Control showed the death rate among men was 2.8%, compared with 1.7% for women.
Scientists say there could be a number of reasons for this difference, including biological and lifestyle factors. Also, women tend to produce stronger immune responses against infections than men. The other reason could be attributed to Estrogen hormone production in women till menopause.
But in other, perhaps less obvious ways, the virus appears to disproportionately affect women. As the fight against COVID-19 continues, an increasing number of women around the world are on the front lines. Many of them will be expected to work longer hours, while juggling domestic responsibilities such as childcare.
Here are a few examples of coronavirus's gendered impact.
Health workers
Chinese authorities have sent more than 41,000 health workers from around the country to support medical staff at the epicenter of the outbreak in Hubei province.
By 24 February, 3,387 health workers in China were infected with COVID-19, more than 90% of them in Hubei.
More than half of the doctors and 90% of the nurses in Hubei are women, according to the Shanghai Women’s Federation, a government body.
More broadly, women make up the majority of workers in the health and social care sector – 70% in 104 countries analyzed by the World Health Organization (WHO).
Women form 70% of workers in the health and social sector, according to the World Health Organization.
Image: World Health Organization
They also earn 11% less than men in the same field, according to the WHO.
Unpaid caregivers
Women and girls already do most of the world’s unpaid care work.
According to the International Labour Organization (ILO), globally, women perform 76.2% of total hours of unpaid care work, more than three-times as much as men. In Asia and the Pacific, that figure rises to 80%.
As health systems become stretched, many people with COVID-19 will need to be cared for at home, adding to women’s overall burden, as well as putting them at greater risk of becoming infected.
School closures
Nearly 300 million students globally are currently missing class due to virus-led school closures, according to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).
The mass shutdown of childcare centers and schools across three dozen countries, as well as localized closures in a further two dozen countries, has left many working parents with little choice but to take time off, or to try to work from home while caring for the Child. There were large household support staff has been put out off job that has added the work load of women folks in taking care of household.
As per media reports the closing of schools and play facilities hits women particularly hard because much of the responsibility for childcare still falls on them. Keeping the kids engaged and confined to house makes the task even harder.
Those who are poor, working in service jobs that cannot be done from home, and those without paid leave are especially vulnerable. The impact on developing and underdeveloped countries women folks are huge. Local Governments are doing their part to mitigate the problem. Extended lockdown would have serious consequences on the population and wellbeing of the Nations.
Total lockdown of economic engines of all nations has led to reverse migration of workers to their respective home states/villages. The economic and health burden on the Nation in general and individual household in particular would be enormous.
Another unintended consequence of school closures is strain on health systems, according to UNESCO, with many medical professionals are struggling to find childcare and support system.
* Author has reproduced certain part from WEF article.
Obsession for Customer Success
4 年Thanks Surya.
Obsession for Customer Success
4 年Well Said how to protect the frontline.
Obsession for Customer Success
4 年Thanks Gopala Krishna.
Obsession for Customer Success
4 年Good input Vishy, we need to articulate this in various forums where we are active.