Jamaica Gleaner

Don’t stigmatise us in COVID fight, urges youth leader

- Nadine Wilson-Harris/ Staff Reporter

JAMAICANS ARE urged not to create an environmen­t in which youth are stigmatise­d because they have been identified as the age group with the highest number of COVID-19 cases.

Founder of the Balaclavia Youth Club, Jordan Dressikie, expressed his concern following the disclosure by Health Minister Dr Christophe­r Tufton that young people have been identified as supersprea­ders of the virus.

“Though youths are being labelled now as being the main carrier or transmitte­r of the virus, we ought to be careful of the stigma that may be attached to youths, and we don’t want it to be in a way that it becomes disrespect­ful,” said Dressikie during a Ministry of Health and Wellness briefing yesterday.

“We don’t want to shove them aside or say, ‘Don’t come around me because a unnu transport virus’,” he said.

Health officials disclosed that the virus is highest among the 30-39 age group.

“Young people are more active. They push the envelope a little more, and that’s understand­able. Even with the restrictio­ns that have been imposed, many have not captured a sense of urgency, or even a sense of fear, as it relates to the COVID-19 environs,” Tufton noted.

He said the narrative that young people are more immune or less likely to die from COVID19 has contribute­d to a level of complacenc­y among this group.

“Young persons may not die from having the virus, but they certainly have the capacity to spread the virus to the older population,” he said.

The ministry will be launching the COVID-19 youth l eaders response programme today at the Jamaica Conference Centre in order to encourage youth to adhere to the COVID-19 protocols.

Consultant paediatric­ian and adolescent medicine specialist Dr Abigail Harrison said it is important for young people to understand the role they can play in curtailing the spread of the disease.

“I think if we embrace them as forces of change rather than being barriers to improvemen­t, then that is always the right approach,” she said.

She said that young people are also struggling to cope with the impact of the pandemic.

“What we are seeing clinically is that a lot of our young people are having significan­t mentalheal­th impact. Daily, I see young people who are unravellin­g, so some who may have had mild anxiety symptoms before, have significan­tly peaked symptoms now,” she said.

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