Living during COVID-19: qualitative analysis of Experts by Experience UK University Associates' socioeconomic inequalities, including readiness recommendations
Joy M. Rooney

TL;DR
This study explores how people with disabilities and carers experienced socioeconomic inequalities during the COVID-19 pandemic and offers recommendations for future pandemic readiness.
Contribution
The paper introduces new insights into pandemic readiness by focusing on the experiences of people with disabilities and carers.
Findings
Experts by Experience faced significant socioeconomic health inequalities during the pandemic.
Key challenges included digital divide, loneliness, and diminished quality of life.
Recommendations for future pandemic readiness emphasize inclusivity and support for vulnerable groups.
Abstract
A vulnerable group of people with disabilities and carers (Experts by Experience) wished for research during the COVID-19 pandemic to assist other people with disabilities in the future. Consideration of this vulnerable group seems to be limited in future policy pandemic readiness despite huge potential mortality. Literature reviewed critical public health theory through assessing health inequalities and health equity in relation to disability/chronic ill health. A standard qualitative thematic method distinguished socioeconomic health inequalities for people with earlier mental/psychosocial distress and other Experts by Experience-including people with physical, visual, self-identified hidden disabilities, and their carers. Environmental, community, and individual challenge were part of the overarching theme. Up to five sub-themes were: shielding, diminished quality of life, use of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 and Mental Health · Health disparities and outcomes · Long-Term Effects of COVID-19
