This detailed map by research participant James shows a time-line and changes from pre-pandemic ‘life B.C. 2020,’ through ‘Stay at Home’ in lockdown to the ‘Stay Alert’ phase. These changes include the changing levels of air pollution and air quality through the three phases of the pandemic, noting the cleansing effect of lockdown and high levels of pollution in the ‘Stay Alert’ phase that exceed pre-pandemic levels. Images of a skull and cross bones in the far right and bottom left of the map point to the perceptions of danger.
Major policy changes are needed for London to recover from the long-term impacts of Covid-19, according to new research on how the pandemic affected communities across the capital.
As the UK Covid public inquiry starts to explore national planning and political decision-making, a Queen Mary University of London report published today calls for urgent action to tackle issues and inequalities in the capital made worse by the pandemic.
This follows a recent study in the Lancet finding “massive global failures” in government responses to Covid-19, with researchers urging investment and planning to reduce future threats, such as the looming “twindemic” of Covid and flu reported in the British Medical Journal.
The new ‘Stay Home Stories’ research draws on 67 in-depth interviews with Londoners spanning a wide range of ages, ethnicities, faiths and migration backgrounds*, using their personal experiences to understand the pandemic’s long-term impacts and recommend policies that will help the city recover.
The study also details the devastating impact of Covid-19 on the capital, with over three million recorded cases (more than 15% of England’s total cases) and almost 24,000 deaths from the virus (the highest regional mortality rate after adjusting for age differences) since March 2020 – and an even heavier toll on some communities and neighbourhoods, with higher mortality rates among Black and minority ethnic Londoners as well as those living in areas with higher social deprivation scores**.
Principal investigator Professor Alison Blunt from Queen Mary University of London’s Centre for Studies of Home commented: “Our study highlights many lessons from life in lockdown for local and national leaders and policy-makers. Covid-19 hit London particularly hard, and its impact deepened existing issues and inequalities across the city, so long-term change is needed if we are to truly recover from the pandemic.”
Professor Blunt and the wider research team are calling for national and local policy interventions on four key issues, which their study found to have significant impact on Londoners’ wellbeing:
1. Housing inequality and precarity in the capital is infamous - and these problems deepened in lockdown when many people had to live in unsafe conditions, some struggling in overcrowded households while others faced the isolation of living alone.
2. Green space is vital for mental health and social connection, but inequalities in the city leave many people without easy or safe access to gardens or parks.
3. Tensions around race and immigration can feed mistrust of the police, NHS and other authorities in some communities - making them less likely to engage with important public health messages and support services.
4. Community and faith organisations were lifelines in lockdown, and are key to pandemic recovery, but many providing this support are under unbearable strain.
The research outlines the policies needed at local authority, Greater London and national scales to start addressing these issues and building a stronger city in the wake of the pandemic.
Recommendations include:
- Making adequate space for home-working and access to green spaces (personal and/or communal) a priority in future housing policies and developments
- Providing extra support to meet the specific needs of single-person households, LGBTQ+ families, dual-household families and vulnerable households
- Including access to green spaces in policies on physical and mental health, neighbourhood cohesion and children’s welfare
- Making parks and other green spaces safe, welcoming and accessible for all
- Co-ordinating state care and support systems with those provided in the community, communicating and consulting with organisations on-the-ground
- Funding those on-the-ground to improve digital tools, translation services and accessibility
- Supporting the leaders of community and faith groups, particularly those who work alone
- Establishing a working group including all faith groups and people without religious beliefs to support the UK Commission on Bereavement, and funding work as needed to address the impact of being unable to grieve those lost in lockdown with traditional mourning rituals.
Professor Blunt explained: “The newly launched UK Covid public inquiry is due to look first at planning, preparedness and political decision-making – areas where our research, and wider evidence from the pandemic so far, suggests the government really fell short. Learning from those mistakes is vital, and now is the time to put protective policies in place that will support long-term pandemic recovery.”
To read the newly published report, and find out more about the wider research project, go to www.stayhomestories.co.uk.
* ‘At Home in London during Covid-19’ Page 4
** ‘At Home in London during Covid-19’ Page 9 (Fig. 2 and Fig. 3)
Our green spaces in Wembley are full of drinkers and their litter - why would anyone want to go for a walk through them? You'd definitely feel vulnerable on your own in these places.
ReplyDeleteBrent example
ReplyDeleteSouth Kilburn Public Open Space which is park scale located in the middle of a Brent Growth, Growth, Growth Zone where it's containerised population car-free housed/ no gardens is to be grown five times by 2041 from what it was in year 2000……
For South Kilburn Growth, Growth, Growth Zoned in phase 3B, Brent in 2022 (see Wembley Matters) proposes re-building schools and more housing on its 60-year-old South Kilburn Public Open Space woodland area. Phase 5 proposes part replacing the in phase 3 destroyed park on its western side. While phase 6 completes the total loss of the large exiting public open space/ flood defence between Dickens, Austen, Maesfield, Blake and Wordsworth Houses, this totally under the radar with zero mitigation as yet.
My prediction is that South Kilburn Public Open Space will not be in phase 5 replaced west by Brent, it will instead be deemed market unviable by that time/ was never in the markets plan anyway. Why doesn't this park/ key flood defence not already have Local Green Space Designation and why has this park not been quality invested in already given it is so crucial to public health, safety and wellbeing as the ongoing pandemic has again proved?
Even the IMF is worried about the UK governments growing of inequalities between its taxpayers by using - segregations, absolute austerities and exclusions baked- in to Marketopian Zones such as South Kilburn. If all social, green and health infrastructure is destroyed inside Growth Zoned; austerity, reduced life expectancy and pandemic vulnerability is being knowingly built in by the Market as there is zero space for services and protections to be delivered from in future.
UK Government and political consensus definitely has the Growth Plan, but it certainly can never be made public.
Elsewhere resilience building, social inclusion and pandemic protection are also being UK zoned and accelerated. Learning from mistakes and protective policies are in fact funded elsewhere from Growth Zones abuses and de-regulations. This public parks destruction for Growth Zoned shows how Covid has had no impact on Brent planning and policy as yet with inequalities set to be escalated now by Growth, Growth, Growth zoned business as usual.
City of Westminster has impressive flood defences already built on its northern boundary which admittedly failed in the July 2021 floods from South Kilburn. South Kilburn's existing modern parkland flood defences are being 100% by market-led destroyed, with Brent Growth in this flood zone building above Victorian combined sewers which are already overloaded by Growth upstream on the River Westbourne in West Hampstead.