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Editorial
. 2024 Mar;48(1):4-22.
doi: 10.1007/s11013-024-09848-6. Epub 2024 Mar 9.

Introduction: Student Experiences of COVID-19 Around the Globe: Insights from the Pandemic Journaling Project

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Editorial

Introduction: Student Experiences of COVID-19 Around the Globe: Insights from the Pandemic Journaling Project

Heather M Wurtz et al. Cult Med Psychiatry. 2024 Mar.

Abstract

The COVID-19 crisis has taken a significant toll on the mental health of many students around the globe. In addition to the traumatic effects of loss of life and livelihood within students' families, students have faced other challenges, including disruptions to learning and work; decreased access to health care services; emotional struggles associated with loneliness and social isolation; and difficulties exercising essential rights, such as rights to civic engagement, housing, and protection from violence. Such disruptions negatively impact students' developmental, emotional, and behavioral health and wellbeing and also become overlaid upon existing inequities to generate intersectional effects. With these findings in mind, this special issue investigates how COVID-19 has affected the mental health and wellbeing of high school and college students in diverse locations around the world, including the United States, Mexico, Brazil, China, and South Africa. The contributions collected here analyze data collected through the Pandemic Journaling Project, a combined research study and online journaling platform that ran on a weekly basis from May 2020 through May 2022, along with complementary projects and using additional research methods, such as semi-structured interviews and autobiographical writing by students. The collection offers a nuanced, comparative window onto the diverse struggles that students and educators experienced at the height of the pandemic and considers potential solutions for addressing the long-term impacts of COVID-19. It also suggests a potential role for journaling in promoting mental wellbeing among youth, particularly in the Global South.

Keywords: COVID-19; Global mental health; Health inequity; Life projects; Mental health; Students.

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