Reconsidering the role of place in health and welfare services: lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States and Canada

被引:4
作者
Ratliff G.A. [1 ]
Sousa C.A. [2 ]
Graaf G. [3 ]
Akesson B. [4 ]
Kemp S.P. [5 ]
机构
[1] Miami University, Oxford, OH
[2] Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, PA
[3] University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, TX
[4] Wilfrid Laurier University, ON
[5] University of Auckland, Auckland
关键词
COVID-19; pandemic; Health; Place; Place theory; Social welfare; Wellbeing;
D O I
10.1007/s42532-022-00111-z
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Places—the meaningful locations of daily life—have been central to the wellbeing of humans since they first formed social groups, providing a stable base for individuals, families, and communities. In the United States and Canada, as elsewhere, place also plays a foundational role in the provision of critical social and health services and resources. Yet the globally destabilizing events of the COVID-19 pandemic have dramatically challenged the concept, experience, and meaning of place. Place-centered public health measures such as lockdowns and stay-at-home orders have disrupted and transformed homes, neighborhoods, workplaces, and schools. These measures stressed families and communities, particularly among marginalized groups, and made the delivery of vital resources and services more difficult. At the same time, the pandemic has stimulated a range of creative and resilient responses. Building from an overview of these effects and drawing conceptually on theories of people–place relationships, this paper argues for critical attention to reconsidering and re-envisioning prevailing assumptions about place-centric policies, services, and practices. Such reappraisal is vital to ensuring that, going forward, scholars, policymakers, and practitioners can effectively design and deliver services capable of maintaining social connections, safety, and wellbeing in contexts of uncertainty, inequality, and flux. © 2022, The Author(s).
引用
收藏
页码:57 / 69
页数:12
相关论文
共 97 条
  • [1] Ahrens K.F., Neumann R.J., Kollmann B., Brokelmann J., von Werthern N.M., Malyshau A., Weichert D., Lutz B., Fiebach C.J., Wessa M., Kalisch R., Plichta M.M., Lieb K., Tuscher O., Reif A., Impact of COVID-19 lockdown on mental health in Germany: longitudinal observation of different mental health trajectories and protective factors, Transl Psychiatry, 11, 1, (2021)
  • [2] Akesson B., Castle and cage: meanings of home for Palestinian children and families, Glob Soc Welf, 1, 2, pp. 81-95, (2014)
  • [3] Almagro M., Coven J., Gupta A., Orane-Hutchinson A., Disparities in COVID-19 risk exposure: evidence from geolocation data (SSRN SCHOLARLY PAPER ID 3695249), Soc Sci Res Netw, (2021)
  • [4] Almeida M., Shrestha A.D., Stojanac D., Miller L.J., The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on women’s mental health, Arch Women’s Mental Health, 23, 6, pp. 741-748, (2020)
  • [5] Alon T., Doepke M., Olmstead-Rumsey J., Tertilt M., The impact of COVID-19 on gender equality (Working paper no. 26947
  • [6] working paper series), National Bureau of Economic Research, (2020)
  • [7] Barnett M.L., Grabowski D.C., Nursing homes are ground zero for COVID-19 pandemic, JAMA Health Forum, 1, 3, (2020)
  • [8] Bateman L.B., Schoenberger Y.-M.M., Hansen B., Osborne T.N., Okoro G.C., Speights K.M., Fouad M.N., Confronting COVID-19 in under-resourced, African American neighborhoods: a qualitative study examining community member and stakeholders’ perceptions, Ethn Health, 26, 1, pp. 49-67, (2021)
  • [9] Beland L.-P., Brodeur A., Wright T., The short-term economic consequences of COVID-19: Exposure to disease, remote work and government response (SSRN Scholarly Paper ID 3584922), Social Science Research Network, (2020)
  • [10] Bell F.M., Amplified injustices and mutual aid in the COVID-19 pandemic, Qual Soc Work, 20, 1-2, pp. 410-415, (2021)