Canadians with disabilities, chronic health conditions hit hard by COVID-19: U of T study
The University of Toronto Mississauga's David Pettinicchio knows that the COVID-19 pandemic is having an impact on the mental and financial health of many Canadians.
But three months into the pandemic last year 鈥 before the federal government 鈥 the assistant professor of sociology worried that people with disabilities and chronic health conditions were being left out of the picture 鈥 and paying an even bigger price for it than others.
So, he and University of Alberta sociologist Michelle Maroto set out to prove it.
They launched a national online survey of 1,027 Canadians with disabilities and chronic health conditions last June, to find out how COVID-19 was affecting their employment, financial security and mental health. Fifty respondents also participated in in-depth, one-on-one follow-up interviews.
Their findings were recently published in and in a series of opinion editorials in the Toronto Star.
鈥淲hat we found was very troubling,鈥 Pettinicchio says. 鈥淲e saw that the pandemic was having a disproportionate impact on a group that was already socially, politically and culturally marginalized and experiencing a constellation of issues.鈥
Almost half of the respondents said that COVID-19 was affecting their ability to pay down debt, make rent and utility payments and purchase groceries. Although nearly half of those surveyed held a full- or part-time job, more than 40 per cent worried that they might lose it within the next month.
鈥淭his is a group already earning less and more likely to be in retail and service jobs impacted by the pandemic,鈥 Pettinicchio explains. What鈥檚 more, many people with disabilities and chronic health conditions are unemployed, under-employed or unable to work, which meant that they were ineligible for the Canada Emergency Response Benefit (CERB).
While the federal government did offer a one-time $600 emergency benefit for Canadians with disabilities, that money wasn鈥檛 available until the fall 鈥 after the survey.
Pettinicchio and Maroto also observed a direct link between financial uncertainty and mental health, with more than one-third of the survey participants reporting increased levels of anxiety and stress. Mental distress was most pronounced among those with severe disabilities and health issues and those who reported that COVID-19 negatively affected their finances.
The hit to the pocketbook was further compounded by feelings of isolation. Pettinicchio explains: 鈥淐are workers weren鈥檛 visiting, they couldn鈥檛 see their doctor face to face, many were cut off from their community services and they were isolated from family.鈥
On top of that, many respondents worried about getting COVID-19 while working in jobs that put them at greater risk.
鈥淭he pandemic has exacerbated pre-existing inequalities,鈥 Pettinicchio concludes. The researchers fear that if nothing is done, those already disadvantaged will continue to be left behind. 鈥淎ll of this won鈥檛 get resolved once the pandemic is under control. It will pose long-term problems.鈥
In , he called on the Canadian government to do more 鈥渢o ensure that government policy responses to the pandemic are inclusive of the voices of individuals most negatively impacted by this health crisis.鈥
Pettinicchio also hopes his research 鈥 and the follow-up study he and Maroto are planning for this summer 鈥 will give Canadians pause when they wax nostalgic about the pre-pandemic world.
鈥淭hat world was never fair or equal for all. Why shouldn鈥檛 we use this shock to our system as a way of thinking about doing something about economic, social and health inequalities? Why not make this an opportunity to take meaningful action?鈥 he asks.
The study was funded in part by a Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada Insight Grant and an Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation Early Researcher Award Grant.