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International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health ; 17(11), 2020.
Article in English | CAB Abstracts | ID: covidwho-1409597

ABSTRACT

Background: This study's aims are to assess the current evidence presented in the literature regarding the potential risks of COVID-19 infection among pregnant women and consequent fetal transmission.

2.
adult article Brazil conceptual framework coronavirus disease 2019 exhaustion family conflict grief health care access human major clinical study male men's health mental health pandemic qualitative research social isolation social support somatization ; 2021(Jornal Brasileiro de Psiquiatria)
Article in English | WHO COVID | ID: covidwho-1362114

ABSTRACT

Objective: To analyze, from the perspective of self-report of antecedents and consequences, how the COVID-19 pandemic decrease the health of men living in Brazil. Methods: Qualitative study, conducted with 200 men living in all regions of Brazil through the application of a semi-structured instrument, hosted on an online platform. The data were analyzed with the Collective Subject Discourse method and anchored in the theoretical framework of Dialectical Historical Materialism. Results: The COVID-19 pandemic decrease men’s mental health because it worsened the history of personal, affective, family, occupational, dysfunctional and/or morbid problems, causing consequences of psychic somatization, family dissolution, end of affective relationship, marital conflicts, social isolation, financial difficulty, vulnerability of the work situation and occupational exhaustion, sudden changes in behavior, barriers in access to health care and impaired experiences of death and grief. Conclusion: Social support networks need to be strengthened in order to minimize the direct and indirect impacts caused by the pandemic materiality for mental health and the various dimensions of life affected.

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