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23% of the poorest farmers in rural areas have no savings for emergencies, and local employment providing daily income will likely be cut off due to movement restrictions from the government. Remittance flows have already dropped around 40%, reducing additional income. With children home from school and other families returning from urban areas, these households will have more mouths to feed. Rural health clinics are less equipped than urban ones to manage COVID-19 patients, as only 55% have basic water services in least developed countries. Women, who are often primary caregivers, will be disproportionately impacted as rates of gender-based violence and child marriage are expected to increase during the crisis.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
28 views1 page

Https

23% of the poorest farmers in rural areas have no savings for emergencies, and local employment providing daily income will likely be cut off due to movement restrictions from the government. Remittance flows have already dropped around 40%, reducing additional income. With children home from school and other families returning from urban areas, these households will have more mouths to feed. Rural health clinics are less equipped than urban ones to manage COVID-19 patients, as only 55% have basic water services in least developed countries. Women, who are often primary caregivers, will be disproportionately impacted as rates of gender-based violence and child marriage are expected to increase during the crisis.

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RafiaZaman
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https://www.raflearning.

org/post/new-covid-19-emergency-briefing-vulnerable-households-the-
edge-the-pandemic

23% of the poorest farmers have any money set aside for emergencies (1). Local employment that
provides day-to-day income will most likely be cut off as a result of government restrictions on
movement. Families may also find themselves without the usual income from urban or international
remittances. Due to COVID-19, remittance flows in Africa have already dropped around 40% (2). 
These rural households are also likely to have additional mouths to feed with children home from
school and other families returned from urban areas. 

Once the virus has arrived, social distancing outside the home may be easier in rural areas, but risks
within the home remain. Subsistence farmers tend to have limited space in a home for self-isolation
and lack access to running water and sanitation facilities. In Tanzania, for example, only 2% of
subsistence farmers have access to running water in their home (5). If/when the virus spreads to rural
areas, there may be a loss of productivity due to sick family members. Rural health clinics will be less
equipped to manage COVID-19 patients. For example, in Least Developed Countries, only 55% of
healthcare facilities had basic water services (6). There are also significant limitations on access to
oxygen and ventilators — critical tools in treating extreme cases of COVID-19 (7).

The group most vulnerable as COVID-19 spreads to rural areas is women, as any crisis tends to
exacerbate already existing structural inequalities. The disproportionate burden on women and girls as
caregivers, household managers and participants in the informal and insecure economy is brought into
stark relief by the pandemic. Case studies from Ebola outbreaks clearly show that women suffer
disproportionately during health crises. In Liberia, 75% of the Ebola deaths were women, in large part
because women tend to be the primary caregivers for sick family members (10). During the Ebola
outbreak in Sierra Leone, lack of access to reproductive healthcare services caused at least as many
deaths as Ebola and teen pregnancy rose by 50% (11). Rates of gender-based violence (GBV) are
likely to increase, as are those of child marriage. In Lebanon and Malaysia, the UN has already
reported double the number of calls to GBV helplines as this time last year (12). As women are, in
turn, most likely to be part of frontline medical staff in rural areas, it is crucial that they are protected
and supported.

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