Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Children and Families from Marginalized Groups: A Qualitative Study in Kingston, Ontario
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Data Source
2.2. Participants
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Routine
“Even though they’re really little, you could see that they were very sad, missing their daily routine and structure of going to Daycare or going to school, playing with their peers, going to that home Daycare, going out to the park, seeing their friends. There was a sadness in them… you could kind of see it in their behaviour because their behaviour would escalate… when they were frustrated and they couldn’t get out and… advocate for themselves that they wanted to [be] with their friends.”(Service Provider, Indigenous, 1A)
“A lot of the kids that I saw were struggling with anxiety because they weren’t able to see their friends, their family, having no routine.”(Service Provider, Indigenous, 1A)
“Whether that be children, small children or adult children, what we saw was an immediate stripping of peoples’ supports…Their social supports… their structural supports and all of those things that they depended on to keep them well and regulated.”(Service Administrator, 10B)
“Some people struggled immensely with children and family members that require 24 h care and… previous to [the] pandemic were shared between systems like health and school and developmental services. So we saw people physically tired very early. We saw the effects of isolation in care giving come on very early.(Service Administrator, 10B)
“I have had a handful of children who we support that have done much better without the demands of society telling them they must get up at a certain time. They must brush their teeth. They must go to a school environment that… might not work for them. They must participate in the socially acceptable activity in a socially acceptable way. And they must continue with their programs… But those are the families that have had the necessary means to maintain an income… And they perhaps have some family support that allows for that to happen.”(Service Administrator, 10B)
3.2. School Closures
“I worry deeply about learning loss.”(Service Administrator, 1B)
“We’re seeing lots of kids that are really… falling behind in school… And now the kids are not able to receive the specialized supports that they would have needed. And I’m worried that they’re falling farther and farther behind.”(Service Provider, 5B)
“A lot of struggles of–what’s going to happen at school, what is school going to look like now, why do I have to wear a mask, who’s going be in my class, how many times am I going to have to wash my hands. There was just a lot of unknowns for them to go back to school. So I [have] been fielding a lot of questions around children anxiety [and] parent anxiety with school.”(Service Provider, Indigenous, 1A)
“When you have families, young families that are where there is a lot of stress, there’s food insecurity, housing insecurity and like inadequate housing like just under housed, it makes it just really hard to create an online learning environment for their children…[T]here is continuing to be a profound impact on kids learning.”(Volunteer, Indigenous, 13A)
“I think having kids go to school during the day is really important for a lot of reasons. It gives parents a break from kids. It gives kids a break from parents… And it’s actually really important… for kids that have behavior struggles and parents that struggle to manage them”(Service Provider, 5B)
“I feel that it was really humbling to see finally some Indigenous families not having to be in the colonial structure of schools and school boards.”(Volunteer, Indigenous, 9A)
“They were including their children in the baking. They were including their children in the measuring. They were going back to our traditional ways of how we teach our young. And it wasn’t the western reading, writing, arithmetic. It was in the most holistic way.”(Service Administrator, Indigenous, 9A)
3.3. Home Safety
“Parental stress piece is something that obviously is filtering down into… children.”(Service Provider, 3B)
“Maybe [children’s own] anxieties were influenced by their parents’ anxieties.”(Service Provider, 8B)
“In regard to intimate partner violence or conflict… it may not be that we’ve had a huge jump in referrals, but what we see is… there [are] more crises. There’s more severity. And heightened risk of separation within the families.”(Service Administrator, 12B)
“We’re having more meetings with CAS than ever.”(Service Provider, 5B)
“Kids who are witnessing new domestic violence, lateral violence, all kinds of different forms of what is not normal, but is being normalized. And that’s a really hard part to address is how do we now help come out of this as least affected as possible, given what we don’t know… And we may not know the adverse childhood experiences of this for a number of years.”(Volunteer, Indigenous, 9A)
“Some families are happy that they’re spending more time together”(Service Provider, Indigenous, 5A
3.4. Socialization and Development
“There hasn’t been the kind of play that normally there would be due to… the effects of social distancing. And that’s really had a big impact on kids’… socialization. Like the kids that come to [name of social service] tend to be younger and so… they really need that play socialization... I think that it’s had a big impact on children in terms of play as being their usual and normal way that they integrate the complexity of their social lives”(Volunteer, Indigenous, 13A)
“That was really tough just in terms of just mental health and general wellbeing, not being able to socialize with their peer group the way that they did or were used to doing. And that being such a huge part of their development”(Service Provider, 3B)
“Now that the children are integrating back into what normal is, it’s evident that their personalities have changed. The experiences that they’ve experienced have changed them, have maybe perhaps made them a little bit more jaded, has perhaps made them a little bit more grown”(Volunteer, Indigenous, 9A)
“One [concern] is the impact on young children and their development in both physical development, their physical wellbeing, their cultural connection, their language.”(Volunteer, Indigenous, 13A)
“The kids under […] four […] there were new behaviours that popped up. So a little bit of depression, a little bit of behaviours regressing. Some of them regressed. Some were potty trained. Some of them regressed… and went back and weren’t potty trained. Some of them decided they weren’t eating.”(Service Provider, Indigenous, 1A)
“They weren’t understanding why they couldn’t go into the grocery store with mom. Why everybody was wearing a mask. It became scary. Kids that were going to the day care, that went so willingly, were scared because they were getting screened at the door with someone in a full body suit with… the temperature thing at their head… So a lot of them have said the kids are adjusting.”(Service Provider, 4B)
3.5. Outdoor Spaces
“They’re afraid to let them play outside, so the kids are bouncing off the walls and the parents are stressed.”(Service Provider, 5B)
“Parents that don’t have a lot of resources, have decided to keep their kids home, they’re sedentary all day. So they’re on the screen or they’re watching TV, they’re gaining weight… even if all the restrictions were lifted tomorrow… these new pattern of increased… sedentariness [has] long-lasting consequences.”(Service Provider, 5B)
“They don’t have private back yards so those kids are not going outside because there’s no private space to play. The parks were closed… so they’re all cooped up in a small room together. That’s not going to go smoothly for any family.”(Service Provider, 5B)
“I feel that it was really humbling to see finally some Indigenous families… connecting to the land.”(Volunteer, Indigenous, 9A)
3.6. Indigenous Ways of Knowing and Being
“We used to do like traditional teaching workshops with families where we would make let’s say earrings or moccasins or do a teaching or have dinner together... We’re unable to do those things right now and are unable to provide the services for them. We have gone virtual with some of our workshops, but it’s just not quite the same when you’re at home trying to do it on your own.”(Service Provider, Indigenous, 1A)
“We love our people. And we like to be together and it’s being together, sharing and loving and giving kindness to one another… I think it’s hard for Indigenous People because of that. Because we’re missing that.”(Service Provider, Indigenous, 2A)
“Multigenerational trauma … is [exacerbated] by isolation and lack of connection to cultural events, opportunities, relationships, etc. And also [isolation exacerbated] pre-existing barriers to health services and other [..] services that Indigenous [Peoples] struggle accessing.”(Service Administrator, 12B)
4. Discussion
5. Limitations
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Variable | Category | Number n = 31 |
---|---|---|
Ethnicity | Indigenous | 15 |
Non-Indigenous | 16 | |
Target population | Urban (exclusively) | 8 |
Rural (exclusively) | 0 | |
Both | 23 | |
Service sector * | Healthcare services | 9 |
Housing/shelter | 2 | |
Education | 3 | |
Social services/other | 17 | |
Role in organizations | Admin/management | 12 |
Direct service provision | 14 | |
Volunteer | 5 | |
Length of time in organization | <2 years | 4 |
2–5 years | 12 | |
5–10 years | 6 | |
>10 years | 9 |
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Share and Cite
Lee, H.; Bayoumi, I.; Watson, A.; Davison, C.M.; Fu, M.; Nolan, D.; Mitchell, D.; Traviss, S.; Kehoe, J.; Purkey, E. Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Children and Families from Marginalized Groups: A Qualitative Study in Kingston, Ontario. COVID 2021, 1, 704-716. https://doi.org/10.3390/covid1040056
Lee H, Bayoumi I, Watson A, Davison CM, Fu M, Nolan D, Mitchell D, Traviss S, Kehoe J, Purkey E. Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Children and Families from Marginalized Groups: A Qualitative Study in Kingston, Ontario. COVID. 2021; 1(4):704-716. https://doi.org/10.3390/covid1040056
Chicago/Turabian StyleLee, Hannah, Imaan Bayoumi, Autumn Watson, Colleen M. Davison, Minnie Fu, Dionne Nolan, Dan Mitchell, Sheldon Traviss, Jennifer Kehoe, and Eva Purkey. 2021. "Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Children and Families from Marginalized Groups: A Qualitative Study in Kingston, Ontario" COVID 1, no. 4: 704-716. https://doi.org/10.3390/covid1040056
APA StyleLee, H., Bayoumi, I., Watson, A., Davison, C. M., Fu, M., Nolan, D., Mitchell, D., Traviss, S., Kehoe, J., & Purkey, E. (2021). Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Children and Families from Marginalized Groups: A Qualitative Study in Kingston, Ontario. COVID, 1(4), 704-716. https://doi.org/10.3390/covid1040056