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In one year, hard-won gains wiped out; UNICEF

In one year, hard-won gains wiped out; UNICEF

Covid 19 pandemic exposed the inequalities among children that existed for long with the worst affected were from the poorest countries and disadvantaged by discrimination, social exclusion, fragility and conflict. Though less vulnerable to Covid 19 Virus, the children faced much shock because of school closures, mental health strains of parents, increased vulnerability to abuse, loss of access to vital health care, says the UNICEF 2020 Annual Report published this month.

In the annual report, UNICEF underscores how ‘2020 was a year like no other’.  It said that at least one in seven children and young people lived under stay-at-home policies for most of last year. It mentions that school closure affected about 94 per cent of students and one third of them had no access to remote learning. Moreover, disruptions in food systems, and health and nutrition services left about 44 million children hungry, the report noted.

UNICEF Executive Director Henrietta Fore said, “The global crisis sparked by the COVID-19 pandemic has been unprecedented in its scope and the inequality of its impact. In one short year, it wiped out hard-won development gains for children and pushed more families into poverty.”

Moreover, she pointed out that the pandemic widened the gulf between the haves and have-nots.

“As communities struggled to contain the virus, UNICEF was there to provide information, deliver supplies like personal protective equipment or PPE, syringes and testing kits, and keep vital health services – like immunizations and treatment for malnutrition – up and running. As schools were closed, UNICEF was there to provide a range of remote learning options – including online delivery of education. As families struggled economically, UNICEF was there to provide social protection initiatives, like cash transfers. As the vaccines were rapidly developed, UNICEF was there playing a leading role in the COVAX Facility,” the UNICEF Executive Director said.

DISRUPTED ESSENTIAL HEALTH AND NUTRITIONAL SERVICES

The UNICEF Annual report says that the pandemic disrupted essential health and nutrition services in 2020, reversing decades-long improvements. It says that around one third of countries faced declines of 10 per cent or more in-service coverage for routine immunizations, outpatient care for childhood infectious diseases, and maternal health services by the end of October 2020.

The UNICEF report warns that Covid 19 threatens to roll back the hard won progress made to date, straining fragile social service, protection and justice systems, increasing gender-based risks and deepening inequalities. Moreover, the crisis also raised ‘hidden’ issues like mental health, violence at home, and the needs of children without family care.

HOW COVID 19 AFFECTED CHILDREN
WHAT UNICEF DID
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