In just a matter of weeks, the COVID-19 pandemic has led to huge societal public health
and economic challenges worldwide. The clinical effects of COVID-19 on young children
are uncertain when compared with older age groups, with lower morbidity and mortality
rates and no conclusive evidence supporting transmission during pregnancy, on the
one hand,
1
,
2
but some emerging evidence of rising rates of child hyperinflammatory shock, on the
other.
3
Research on the effects of prior pandemics and disasters clearly indicates that there
will be both immediate and long-term adverse consequences for many children, with
particular risks faced during early childhood, when brain architecture is still rapidly
developing and highly sensitive to environmental adversity
4
. Estimates predict a rise in maternal and child mortality in low- and middle-income
countries as health services for non-COVID related issues become scarce. For example,
a conservative scenario of 15% reduction in coverage of life-saving essential health
interventions for 6 months in low- and middle-income countries is associated with
a 9.8% increase in under-5 mortality and an 8.3% increase in maternal mortality.
5
Before the pandemic, 43 % of all children under 5 years of age in the world were estimated
to be at risk of not achieving their developmental potential.
6
Unless there is a commitment to support coordinated, multisectoral approaches in which
low-and middle-income countries governments receive international support to scale
up essential interventions, a much higher percentage of children are at risk of devastating
physical, socioemotional, and cognitive consequences over the entire course of their
lives. We review the evidence base on short- and long-term risks for children during
early childhood development (ECD, defining this from prenatal to 8 years of age).
We also present evidence-based mitigating program and policy actions that may reduce
these risks.
Immediate Consequences for Young Children
Maternal and child mortality and morbidity are predicted to increase in the short
run not only directly from COVID-19 related illness, but as critical resources are
directed away from primary care to respond to the pandemic. Early results from a nationally
representative phone survey in the United States show that over one-third of parents
of children under 6 years of age reported delaying health care visits.
7
Risks include HIV-positive pregnant women and those in the postnatal period interrupting
their supply of antiretroviral medication, placing their infants at risk of vertical
transmission of HIV. This has the potential to begin to reverse the enormous progress
made by prevention of mother-to-child transmission programs, especially in parts of
sub-Saharan Africa where rates of maternal infection remain high. Interruptions to
the vaccination schedule in early childhood could have short- and long-term ramifications
for children’s health. Furthermore, as has been experienced during the HIV epidemic,
illness, hospitalization, separation, and loss of caregivers have immediate harmful
effects on young children’s health, nutrition, wellbeing, and learning. These effects
can occur even in the absence of infection or symptoms among children.
Deteriorating economic circumstances will further exacerbate immediate health, nutrition,
care and education risks. It is estimated that the pandemic can lead this year to
an additional 42 to 66 million children who live in extreme poverty, and that the
economic shocks experienced by families because of the global economic downturn could
reverse the last 2 to 3 years of progress in reducing infant mortality.
8
Families may lose wages and housing, and have to bear the costs of increased health
care and associated food insecurity. Low-income households quickly deplete savings
and sell assets to provide better food and treatment for ill household members. As
in prior economic crises, widespread loss of employment and increases in poverty drive
further migration, displacement, and family separations, which severely affects early
childhood nutrition, care and development.
9
These factors are compounded by the stress experienced by caregivers, undermining
their ability to provide consistent nurturing care.
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Parents can be the buffer between, and/or the mechanism through which, crises in the
environment affect young children’s experiences thereof. Parenting and family factors
are the critical drivers of children’s early healthy growth and development and are
thus primary in determining the immediate severity of pandemic impacts on young children
now and in the future. In crisis situations, primary caregivers and parents struggle
to keep up with providing health, nutrition, safety and care of children. For those
household already living in conditions of adversity and stress, this crisis may have
particularly harmful effects. And with many childcare and early education facilities
closed worldwide, and interactions with extended families disrupted, children are
deprived of both social and cognitive stimulation beyond their homes, in addition
to the meals and other resources provided by many ECD programs. Early evidence shows
increases in parents reporting mental health difficulties as well as increases in
child behavior problems since the onset of the pandemic.
7
The challenges may be amplified for parents and family members caring for children
with disabilities, or living with disabilities themselves.
Maternal mental health plays an important role during pregnancy also. Research has
demonstrated exposure to prenatal depression affecting DNA methylation in a gene related
to the stress response in the child.
12
Prenatal maternal stress more generally can lead to adverse pregnancy outcomes such
as preterm birth, and increased perinatal complications.
13
The importance of supporting parents during pregnancy and after birth cannot be emphasized
enough.
Crowded housing and lack of access to water, sanitation and hygiene facilities in
concentrated urban poverty, refugee camps, and informal settlements makes preventive
behaviors like physical distancing, handwashing, or within-household isolation of
particular members difficult. In addition, early reports show that confinement and/or
crowded conditions are associated with large increases in domestic violence related
to COVID-19 related movement restrictions.
14
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Intimate partner violence during pregnancy, in turn, appears to affect DNA methylation
in a gene centrally involved in the stress response system of the child.
16
Restrictions on movement also can increase sexual exploitation. The Ebola crisis had
a significant impact on girls, with increases in teen pregnancy, sexual violence and
disproportionate school dropout and marginalization.
17
In Sierra Leone there was an 11 % increase in the chance of pregnancy for girls 12
– 17 years as a result of the Ebola crisis.
18
. Adolescent pregnancies, especially in context of poverty, uncertainty, and disruptions
of the social fabric, carry their own risks to the development of both the mother
and the child.
19
Even before conception, physical and mental health of mothers and fathers can affect
children’s postnatal development. For example, stress symptoms in future fathers prior
to conception can affect postnatal stress reactivity.
20
Supporting the well-being and health of adolescents and young adults in the pandemic
may therefore bring about benefits for both current and future generations.
21
Long-Term Risks
Long-term follow-up studies of individuals conceived and in utero during pandemics,
natural disasters and famines (e.g., the Dutch hunger winter, 1918/19 flu pandemic,
North American ice storm of 1998, and Chilean earthquake of 2010) show the potential
for life-long negative consequences of such shocks.22, 23, 24 Studies have demonstrated
reduced educational attainment and lifelong earnings and increased likelihood of obesity,
non-communicable diseases, and mental health problems (e.g., depression, schizophrenia),
depending on the timing of in utero exposure.
25
These long-term effects may have short-term precursors. For example, changes in DNA
methylation due to in utero exposure to the Canadian ice storm mediated the association
between maternal prenatal stress and child immune and metabolic function at the age
of 13 years.
26
The long-term effects of this pandemic for children are likely to be compounded by
an enduring economic downturn well beyond the months of quarantine or restricted movement.
International Monetary Fund projections predict a global economic recession to extend
beyond 2021, even if the pandemic is contained.
27
Employment may take years to be recuperated in some sectors, and loss of productive
assets and business loss may be unrecoverable. Duration of childhood poverty may therefore
span all of the early childhood years or beyond. Studies of economic crises as well
as birth cohort studies in high as well as low- and middle-income countries demonstrate
the potential for life-long negative effects of exposure to poverty early in life,
with more severe effects associated with longer exposure to poverty.
10
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28, 29, 30, 31, 32 In some countries such as the United States, there is a racial
component to the family’s ability to deal with the stress of severe economic losses.
In addition to a higher rate of poverty (child poverty rates in African American families
are 32% vs. 11% in white families), African American families have one-tenth the family
net worth of white families, even at similar educational levels.
33
,
34
Thus, there is much less financial flexibility or cushion to protect these families
and their children during economic crises such as the current one.
Socioeconomic inequalities at a global level are thus exacerbating the situation for
millions of families. Furthermore, seasonal climate-related patterns (e.g., monsoon)
and other infectious diseases (e.g., dengue, malaria, diarrhea) may deal further blows
to those living in vulnerable geographic areas. These enduring and accentuated economic
inequalities yield the potential for heightened societal discrimination, violence,
and involuntary displacement.
Mitigating Actions to Support Early Childhood and Later Development
Evidence of the effectiveness of programs for families with young children - particularly
those that assist caregivers, parents and other household members – supports policies
that can mitigate the severe short- and long-term impacts on young children of the
COVID-19 pandemic.
First, healthcare and economic relief are critical and must occur together. Emergency
food provision should be accompanied by sustainable economic support (eg, through
child benefits, increased cash transfers), as transfer-based social protection can
benefit multiple domains of children’s health and development.
35
These efforts must be accompanied by support for caregivers’ well-being, mental health
and capacity to provide nurturing care for young children as a family support package,
so that young children can thrive, not just survive.
36
Screening for needs assessment (e.g. basic needs and symptom checklists being implemented
concurrently at mass scale) could integrate items measuring caregivers’ anxiety, stress
and depression as well as both basic and psychosocial needs of their young children.
37
Under the current conditions of less accessible childcare and healthcare, cash transfer
programs, such as child benefits, should take into account the heightened costs of
raising young children, as the Canadian child benefit program does.
38
Evidence suggests that stimulation and nutritional support is particularly important
in early childhood, and within early childhood, more important during the perinatal
period and infancy when the brain is particularly plastic.
39
Successful national efforts to integrate cash transfers/child benefits, nutrition
(including support for breastfeeding), and health interventions with support for parenting
and early learning are models to be considered closely.
36
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40
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41
These support polices are in alignment with the new United Nations framework on delivery
of interventions across health and social protection as a package, for countries and
the international development sector to respond to COVID-19 with a focus on protecting
children.
42
Second, delivery platforms that are at a scale to reach families with young children
– depending on country context, health, nutrition or social protection for example
– must adapt to the current pandemic. The kinds of task shifting, retraining, and
targeting of additional resources that have been effective in the response to HIV,
malaria and tuberculosis may have lessons for the unique combination of health, nutrition,
economic and care consequences of COVID-19. Many low- and middle-income countries
face an ongoing HIV epidemic, tuberculosis and multidrug resistant tuberculosis, malaria
and child undernutrition. Trained para-professional communityhealth- and support-workers,
supervised within the health system in collaboration with faith organizations and
civil society, are effective at reaching large numbers of people in their homes and
in groups to deliver information, essential health products, support services and
referrals.43, 44, 45
A delivery platform that is uniquely important in a crisis that forces restricted
movement is mass media. Even in a rich country like the United States, there are estimated
to be over 3 million children who do not have internet connections at home, or where
the service is not adequate to participate in online learning fora.
46
Radio, TV, digital, and app-based learning programs for young children, radio and
other mass media interventions for parents and caregivers, and psychosocial support
through community organizations are being made available in the crisis.
47
Some countries have initiated daily national programming to support parents and caregivers
for the early childhood age group through broadcast on national TV and radio as well
as online (e.g. Peru’s Aprendo en Casa program of the Ministry of Education, launched
in April 2020, which aims to cover all areas of the country including those without
internet or TV access).
48
Triple P Online, the on-line version of a parenting program for parents of children
with elevated behavior problems, uses social media and gamification of parenting content
to improve parents’ behavior management.
49
A text-based parenting intervention that tailored activity messages to five-year-olds’
level of development, as assessed through classroom formative assessment, increased
both stimulating activities and child learning.
50
China’s national online learning platform in response to COVID-19 similarly includes
classes for primary school children broadcast on national television.
51
And to address the need for psychosocial support, telecounseling in China appeared
successful in responding to the COVID-19-related depression, anxiety and stress reported
by healthcare workers and the public.
52
Many media-based programs have been evaluated in the context of improving health,
including HIV health, and addressing poverty and gender-based violence.53, 54, 55
A systematic review showed promising effects on parenting of technology-based programs
in low- and middle-income countries that focused on children’s social-emotional behavior.
56
In contrast to these promising models in media-based intervention, there are serious
public health challenges associated with the ongoing COVID-19 “infodemic” of misinformation.
57
An increase in the use of online platforms has increased children’s risk to online
threads, such as exposure to inappropriate content and exploitation.
8
There are therefore legitimate concerns about moving services, in particular educational
services for children, to online platforms without proper monitoring. In the longer
run, children at risk academically could be further disadvantaged if they do not have
parents who can support their learning process at home. Therefore, media-based learning
platforms should be accompanied by outreach to caregivers and parents.
Third, the unique challenges of COVID-19 require further integration of family support
with the realities of distancing, quarantine, isolation, and in too many cases, loss.
COVID-19 related awareness can accompany ECD awareness and supports for parental well-being
and responsive caregiving. When distancing within households is indicated, separation
of children from caregivers should only occur when absolutely necessary, and when
it does occur, communication between children and caregivers should be maintained
as much as possible.
For those households that experience loss of or serious illness in a caregiver, the
approach to communicating this to children should build on evidence-based principles.
58
Caregivers might avoid talking about difficult issues such as illness and death, especially
when they are distressed themselves. However, research shows that even children as
young as 2 years are aware of changes around them, get upset when a caregiver leaves,
and seek their return; toddlers also notice and react to distress expressed around
them. Children’s understanding of illness and death evolves throughout childhood.
59
Thus, children need coherent explanations that are clear, simple, and concrete, taking
into account their age and level of understanding, and accompanied by support and
reassurance that they will not have to manage alone (for support on how to communicate
about COVID-19 see https://www.psych.ox.ac.uk/research/covid_comms_support). Sensitive
and effective communication has considerable benefits for children and their family’s
long-term psychological wellbeing.
Attention to the most vulnerable populations requires unprecedented coordination of
the above services, due to these groups’ even more challenging contexts. These include
refugees, migrants, and undocumented or stateless immigrants in camps, informal settlements,
and host communities. These households are at particular risk of exclusion from healthcare,
early childhood programming, and employment opportunities.
60
Even in high-income countries like the United States, marginalized groups such as
families with undocumented immigrants may face significant nutritional, health and
educational risks exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic.
61
Community-based programs with demonstrated success in isolated communities – such
as community leadership mobilization for diffusion of health and ECD messages, network-based
communication strategies, and integration of culturally-specific modalities of communication
– may be helpful for remote and/or isolated community contexts of the most vulnerable.
62
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63
Finally, this is an opportune time to foster social cohesion within communities and
nations affected by violence and conflict. UN Secretary-General António Guterres has
appealed for a global ceasefire of conflicts in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.
At least 70 Member States, civil society networks and organizations as well as religious
leaders have endorsed his appeal. Here, we highlight the efforts of the Early Childhood
Development Action Network (ecdan.org); announced by World Bank and UNICEF, endorsed
by the G20, and with thousands of members) and the Early Childhood Peace Consortium
(ecdpeace.org), which aims to build a more peaceful and sustainable world by investing
in ECD programs and empowering youth to become agents of change across generations.
64
,
65
We especially recommend that funding agencies such as the World Bank further strengthen
support to nations to invest in ECD programs as a pathway to peace and sustainability.
We are confident that this will strengthen nations’ ability to facilitate economic
and social recovery.
In sum, the COVID-19 pandemic has the potential to profoundly affect young children’s
development worldwide, through rises in poverty and food insecurity, loss of caregivers,
heightened stress, and reduced health care. These realties can affect not only the
entire life course of the child, but also future generations through physiological,
psychological and epigenetic changes occurring in utero and during early development
that can decelerate the gains made since the turn of the century.
21
The outlined mitigating actions are urgently warranted by governments, NGOs, civil
society and communities to reduce the potential devastating impact on current and
future generations. Our hope is that these coordinated actions and shared responsibility
to address them may not only build recovery, but better, more resilient and equitable
societies to address current and future global crises.