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Addressing the “shadow pandemic” through a public health approach to violence prevention Lara C. Snowdon, Emma R. Barton, Annemarie Newbury, Bryony Parry, Mark A. Bellis, and Joanne C. Hopkins

By: Snowdon, Lara C.
Contributor(s): Barton, Emma R | Newbury, Annemarie | Parry, Bryony | Bellis, Mark A | Hopkins, Joanne C.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Journal of Community Safety & Well-being.Publisher: Community Safety Knowledge Alliance, 2020Subject(s): CHILD ABUSE | COVID-19 | DATA ANALYSIS | DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | ELDER ABUSE | EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES | HEALTH | INTERAGENCY COLLABORATION | INTERVENTION | INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE | ONLINE HARASSMENT | PANDEMICS | POLICE | STALKING | SUPPORT SERVICES | INTERNATIONAL | UNITED KINGDOM | WALESOnline resources: DOI: 10.35502/jcswb.141 (Open access) In: Journal of Community Safety & Well-Being, 2020, 5(2): 60-65Summary: Experts from across the globe have warned of the adverse consequences of COVID-19 lockdown and physical distancing restrictions on violence in the home, with the United Nations describing it as a shadow pandemic. This social innovation narrative explores how a public health approach to violence prevention is implemented in Wales during the COVID-19 pandemic by the multi-agency Wales Violence Prevention Unit. The article highlights early trends in monitoring data on the impact of COVID-19 restrictions on violence, including likely increases in domestic and sexual violence and abuse, concerns over the safety of children and young people, both online and in the home, and increased reporting of elder abuse. The article supports the notion of a shadow pandemic, emphasizing the lack of data that routinely measures violence in the home and online that disproportionately affects women, children, and older people, as well as vulnerable and minority populations. This renders these forms of violence much less “visible” to policy-makers in comparison with violence in public spaces, but they are of no less public health significance. Through sharing this narrative and early findings, we call for increased focus on the development of new data collection methods and violence prevention programs during the COVID-19 pandemic and in the future. (Authors' abstract). Record #6878
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Journal of Community Safety & Well-Being, 2020, 5(2): 60-65

Experts from across the globe have warned of the adverse consequences of COVID-19 lockdown and physical distancing
restrictions on violence in the home, with the United Nations describing it as a shadow pandemic. This social innovation narrative explores how a public health approach to violence prevention is implemented in Wales during the COVID-19 pandemic by the multi-agency Wales Violence Prevention Unit. The article highlights early trends in monitoring data on the impact of COVID-19 restrictions on violence, including likely increases in domestic and sexual violence and abuse, concerns over the safety of children and young people, both online and in the home, and increased reporting of elder abuse. The article supports the notion of a shadow pandemic, emphasizing the lack of data that routinely measures violence in the home and online that disproportionately affects women, children, and older people, as well as vulnerable and minority populations. This renders these forms of violence much less “visible” to policy-makers in comparison with violence in public spaces, but they are of no less public health significance. Through sharing this narrative and early findings, we call for increased focus on the development of new data collection methods and violence prevention programs during the COVID-19 pandemic and in the future. (Authors' abstract). Record #6878