社会的守护者:尼日利亚民间社会应对 COVID-19 大流行。

Q3 Medicine Journal of Emergency Management Pub Date : 2024-07-01 DOI:10.5055/jem.0862
Solomon I Ifejika
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2019 年 12 月,2019 年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)感染从中国武汉市迅速爆发并传播到世界其他国家,引发的情况导致世界卫生组织将其报告为全球突发公共卫生事件。这次疫情导致世界各国骤然遭受重大生命损失、经济混乱、生计丧失和严重困难。2020 年 2 月 27 日,尼日利亚发现首例 COVID-19 感染病例后,政府立即采取行动遏制其蔓延。然而,政府对这一流行病的应对措施得益于来自营利和非营利部门的非国家行为者的支持。因此,本研究特别考察了民间社会组织(CSO)在尼日利亚应对冠状病毒危机中的作用。通过二手资料获得的数据,以及对专题方法和描述-解释方法的分析,研究发现民间社会组织为政府抗击 COVID-19 的斗争做出了令人印象深刻的贡献,特别是在提高人们对病毒的认识和反驳有关疾病的虚假信息等方面。然而,民间社会组织在发挥这些作用时也遇到了一些问题,主要是公民空间被关闭、民间社会组织未被纳入政府的大流行病应对架构以及资金损失。除其他外,该研究建议,在未来发生任何类似于 COVID-19 规模的公共卫生突发事件时,尼日利亚政府应将民间社会组织作为其应对结构的组成部分,同时得出结论认为,这些措施的实施将激励民间社会组织做出更好的贡献。
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Guardian of society: Civil society in Nigeria's response to COVID-19 pandemic.

The rapid breakout and dissemination of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection from the city of Wuhan, China, to the rest of the countries of the world in December 2019 triggered a situation that led the World Health Organization to report it as a global public health emergency. The pandemic resulted in abrupt and significant loss of lives, disruption of economies, loss of livelihoods, and severe hardship across the nations of the world. Nigeria encountered the COVID-19 reality following the discovery of the first case of the infection in the country on February 27, 2020, prompting the government to swing into action to contain its spread. However, the government's response to the pandemic benefited from the support of nonstate actors from the profit and nonprofit sectors. This study, thus, specifically examined the role of civil society organizations (CSOs) in Nigeria's response to the coronavirus crisis. Using data obtained through secondary sources and analysis of thematic and descriptive-interpretive methods, the study found that CSOs impressively contributed to the government's fight against COVID-19, particularly in view of their roles in creating awareness about the virus and rebutting disinformation regarding the disease, among others. Yet, CSOs encountered some problems while undertaking these roles, prominently the closure of the civic space, noninclusion of CSOs in government's pandemic response architecture, and loss of funding. The study recommends, among other things, that in the case of any future public health emergencies of COVID-19 magnitude, the Nigerian Government should make CSOs an integral part of its response structure, while concluding that the application of these measures would incentivize better contributions from CSOs.

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来源期刊
Journal of Emergency Management
Journal of Emergency Management Medicine-Emergency Medicine
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
67
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