- Published
- 10 May 2020
- Journal article
Household level health and socio-economic vulnerabilities and the COVID-19 crisis: an analysis from the UK
- Authors
- Source
- SSM - Population Health
Full text
Abstract
Objectives. To investigate how COVID-19-related health and socio-economic vulnerabilities occur at the household level, and how they are distributed across household types and geographical areas in the United Kingdom. Design. Cross-sectional, nationally representative study. Setting. The United Kingdom. Participants. ~19,500 households. Main outcome measures. Using multiple household-level indicators and principal components analysis, we derive summary measures representing different dimensions of household vulnerabilities critical during the COVID-19 epidemic: health, employment, housing, financial and digital. Results. Our analysis highlights three key findings. First, although COVID-19 health risks are concentrated in retirement-age households, a substantial proportion of working age households also face these risks. Second, different types of households exhibit different vulnerabilities, with working-age households more likely to face financial, housing and employment precarities, and retirement-age households health and digital vulnerabilities. Third, there are area-level differences in the distribution of vulnerabilities across England and the constituent countries of the United Kingdom. Conclusions. The findings imply that the short- and long-term consequences of the COVID-19 crisis are likely to vary by household type. Policy measures that aim to mitigate the health and socio-economic consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic should consider how vulnerabilities cluster together across different household types, and how these may exacerbate already existing inequalities.
Rights
Copyright © 2020 The Author(s). This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Cite as
Mikolai, J., Keenan, K. & Kulu, H. 2020, 'Household level health and socio-economic vulnerabilities and the COVID-19 crisis: an analysis from the UK', SocArXiv, 12, article no: 100628. https://doi.org/10.31235/osf.io/4wtz8
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- Repository URI
- http://hdl.handle.net/10023/19971