Journal ArticleOpen Access
Slum Health: Arresting COVID-19 and Improving Well-Being in Urban Informal Settlements
Authors
Author Affiliations
University of California, Berkeley, Yale University, African Population and Health Research Center, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, ...
Published InJournal of Urban Health
Year2020
Citations590
Abstract
The informal settlements of the Global South are the least prepared for the pandemic of COVID-19 since basic needs such as water, toilets, sewers, drainage, waste collection, and secure and adequate housing are already in short supply or non-existent. Further, space constraints, violence, and overcrowding in slums make physical distancing and self-quarantine impractical, and the rapid spread of an infection highly likely. Residents of informal settlements are also economically vulnerable during any COVID-19 responses. Any responses to COVID-19 that do not recognize these realities will further jeopardize the survival of large segments of the urban population globally. Most top-down strategies to arrest an infectious disease will likely ignore the often-robust social groups and knowledge that already exist in many slums.…
View at Publisher
BORR does not host full-text PDFs. The button above takes you to the original publisher.