COVID-19 Daily Realities for Families: A South African Sample
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Families in South Africa
1.2. Impact of COVID-19 on Families
1.3. Study Aim and Objective
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Sampling Procedure
2.3. Ethical Considerations
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Analysis
2.6. Trustworthiness and Rigour of the Study
3. Results
3.1. Family Experiences of COVID-19
3.1.1. Lockdown Restrictions on Family Routines and Events
“I don’t know what else to, of course not being able to go out and exercise or see friends is a negative… like myself included, but most people, your routine just got completely destroyed”.(Male, 28 (age), Software Engineer)
“Uhm, I miss going to the beach, I miss going away on short breaks. … Uhm, and I miss the freedom that we used to have of just getting in the car and driving”.(Female, 54, Retired)
“The most difficult aspect has been for my children to stay away from school”.(Male, 30, Social Worker)
“That’s a very good thing. It brings families together also although parents aren’t able to go to the office they are able to spend more time with their children”.(Female, 28, Research Assistant)
“Being home together because everybody is working from home. A lot less stressed because not having to commute to the office and then just also with the clients being able to have a lot more meaningful interaction with the entire online sessions because they feel more comfortable and they actually show you the home environment”.(Female, 28, Counsellor)
“For myself and my wife it’s been very difficult because a lot of what we had to do in these past months revolved around government documentation which took an extremely long time due to the virus. As well as the fact we weren’t able to get married like we had planned, well we weren’t able to have a full wedding. We only got legally married”.(Male, 26, Unemployed)
“The negative was the frustration that we could not go home to make sure that our other family members were okay because of the lockdown and the permit. You needed a permit in order to go to Cape Town although it is in the same province. But then you could only get a permit if there was a death in the family. They do not make provision if a family member was sick and family members were old. Like I said my mom is seventy. Yes, she is still in the household with my second oldest brother but for me, it is not the same. I actually wanted to see if she was okay”.(Female, 33, Counsellor)
3.1.2. Family Time
“And also just the lockdown probably gave other families time that they never had for the longest of time just to sit together as a family and you know, just maybe have a meal together. I think some families might have found each other… And you know just its quite good that you know we are just together and even during this time, that’s when probably one needs family, or those that he loves the most, to be close to them”.(Male, 31, Educator)
“Being able to just stay at my house and spend time with myself and my family was a massive benefit… Ja, so, time spent together, number one. Coming together to support one another as well and also from my side just getting a break from the world”.(Male, 28, Software Engineer)
“I got to spend more time with my family, which is always positive. I got to see my children grow substantially how long has it been in the five months that I’ve been home. My eldest son is starting to write”.(Female, 28, Administrative Clerk)
“We built a closer relationship with my sister’s kids, which was non-existent before”.(Male, 28, Self-employed)
“We got on each other’s nerves because of constantly being around each other”.(Female, 26, Law student)
“I think that we need to be aware of the fact that some families are strained having spent so much time indoors with each other that the cabin fever is starting to affect their relationships”.(Male, 27, Counsellor)
3.1.3. Family Communication and Socialisation
“Okay…we using technology better to keep in touch. So, we do like, keep in touch more regularly, whereas, in the past, we might go for a week or two not really like checking in on people. So that is a good thing… So, I think you kind of learn to be better with people. Whereas in the past, you can just like go out if you like if this is too much for you or whatever, and just avoid like talking about issues and stuff. So, and then in that way, maybe everyone is become more caring and understanding”.(Female, 35, Attorney)
“So at the beginning obviously when it was complete national lockdown, so it was obviously tough. You could not meet them anywhere. The only means was to sort of communicate telephonically, virtually, calling and things like that. So that was the only way that you could have any type of interaction and of course that eased up with the restrictions being able to go out”.(Female, 41, Private Banker)
“And I think that communication has improved. Within my family and speaking between myself and Eugene, but then I am also speaking about the broader family like for example, this WhatsApp group, we now have, we did not have before”.(Female, 46, Monitoring and Evaluation officer)
“a lack of communication in general, like, because you want to socialize and you can’t”.(Female, 28, Nail technician and beauty therapist)
“The fact that nobody could see my grandfather for about two, three months because the old age home locked down completely and you weren’t allowed in and out”.(Female, 28, Counsellor)
“And the way, the way that it affects people working from home. They feel isolated quite often. I interact quite on a daily base with the team that I work with. So we have Zoom calls and we have team meetings and things like that. So I’m quite self-sufficient and I’m quite happy with it. But I do miss the interaction because we use to, uhm, everyday meet with a group of people for lunch, sit together and chat, so you do miss that personal interaction. And it’s not the same doing it remotely”.(Female, 64, Administrator)
3.1.4. Financial Management and Constraints
“I would say that before that, I had some financial battles I’m not going to lie but because I was not retrenched or anything my work continues as I was working from home and it actually made me save money now as an individual… To save money, not on spending money, transportation and stuff so at least I can do something better after this whole thing”.(Female, 26, Graduate Intern)
“Family has learned how to better use their money, I feel”.(Male, 26, Unemployed)
“I think one of the biggest concerns that I been thinking about a lot is with the COVID and especially during the level five lockdown, many people were for so long out of work that it made it even impossible for them to come back to a working environment and the consequences of that has not really been saw through or considered in a particular family or household”.(Female, 33, Counsellor)
“I suppose the negative was my husband could not work it affected him, he could not operate so that was the other issues. I think financial it was a strain in the sense of not being productive. His staff was affected because obviously there is no work to do, they cannot get paid. So that was a bit of a hard one to deal with in that sense. But of course being locked down and obviously not knowing bad things were going and spiralling because of the virus but at least we were indoors and not interacting with many people or anything like that”.(Female, 41, Private Banker)
3.1.5. Cleanliness and Good Health
“I think health-wise we became a little bit more healthy because most of the places was shut down and we predominantly started making our own food and we became more aware of what we are putting in and also we became a little bit more active”.(Female, 33, Counsellor)
“like another positive thing about this thing my kids weren’t sick… I don’t think they were at the doctors once this year. And usually by this time my daughter, because she has got high allergies, so when she is in school this time, she is already struggling with her chest and stuff, and she is quite healthy. So that is another positive thing about this whole thing that, even though the kids couldn’t go to school, they weren’t sick at all”.(Female, 28, Nail technician and Beauty therapist)
“I’ve hadn’t had colds this year. Sanitizing obviously been good to us. Because we pretty much make a lot of Cold and Flu meds and I think it’s cold and flu season hasn’t been as intense as we would have expected it. And I’m assuming a lot of that is probably down to cleanliness and, and social distancing”.(Female, 56, Tech business).
3.1.6. Psychological Impact
“It’s not nice because you feel lonely and basically you get, you get, some, some of them, like you can get depressed”.(Male, 19, Student)
“A deeper form of anxiety is created by being judged all the time”.(Male, 28, Self-employed)
“I think the fear and the stress that it put on people. You know, you just don’t know when it’s going to hit you, you don’t know how it’s going to react, you don’t know who’s got it and who hasn’t they don’t even know. I don’t even know if I’ve got or I haven’t so I guess the learning is sort of isolation the fear and you know”.(Female, 56, Tech Business Partner)
“I think a lot of people just didn’t make it in this time and I think it is because of the added stress and not just to mention like, like I know a lot of people that like fell pregnant in this time with me and a lot of them miscarried”.(Female, 28, Nail technician and Beauty Therapist)
4. Discussion
4.1. Lockdown Restrictions on Family Routines and Events
4.2. Psychological Impact
4.3. Family Time
4.4. Family Communication and Socialisation
4.5. Financial Management and Constraints
4.6. Cleanliness and Good Health
5. Strengths and Limitations
6. Implications
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Demographic Characteristic | Participants (n = 31) | Percentage (%) | |
---|---|---|---|
Gender | Male | 13 | 41.9 |
Female | 18 | 58.1 | |
Age | 18–24 years | 4 | 12.9 |
25–35 years | 18 | 58.1 | |
36–46 years | 3 | 9.7 | |
≥47 years | 6 | 19.4 | |
Highest educational level | High school | 10 | 32.3 |
Diploma/Certificate | 5 | 16.1 | |
Bachelors/Honours | 12 | 38.7 | |
Masters/Doctorate | 4 | 12.9 | |
Employment status | Employed | 21 | 67.7 |
Unemployed | 10 | 32.3 | |
Family structure | Nuclear family | 22 | 71.0 |
Single parent family | 2 | 6.5 | |
Grandparent family | 2 | 6.5 | |
Extended family | 5 | 16.1 | |
Home language | English | 22 | 71 |
Afrikaans | 4 | 13 | |
Xhosa | 3 | 10 | |
Zulu | 1 | 3 | |
Other | 1 | 3 |
Examples of Questions |
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|
Sub-Themes | Definition |
---|---|
Lockdown restriction on the family routines and events | This relates to routines such as going to work, school, and shop and events such as birthday celebrations and funerals |
Family time | This refers to as time that families have to connect through various activities and events |
Family communication and socialization | This denotes how and what families used for communication and socialization |
Financial management and constraints | This denotes the financial challenges faced by families and how they were managed |
Cleanliness and good health | This relates to personal and general hygiene |
Psychological impact | This relates to the mental health and well-being of the families |
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October, K.R.; Petersen, L.R.; Adebiyi, B.; Rich, E.; Roman, N.V. COVID-19 Daily Realities for Families: A South African Sample. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 221. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010221
October KR, Petersen LR, Adebiyi B, Rich E, Roman NV. COVID-19 Daily Realities for Families: A South African Sample. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(1):221. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010221
Chicago/Turabian StyleOctober, Kezia Ruth, Lisa Rene’ Petersen, Babatope Adebiyi, Edna Rich, and Nicolette Vanessa Roman. 2022. "COVID-19 Daily Realities for Families: A South African Sample" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 1: 221. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010221