A series of advocacy briefs, published by the Children's Institute at UCT, found that Covid-19 and the associated lockdowns had a severe impact on child welfare. | nickymccain
A series of advocacy briefs, published by the Children's Institute at UCT, found that Covid-19 and associated lockdowns had serious impacts on child welfare.
The pandemic has chipped away at child safety - and created the potential for children to experience more violence at home.A series of advocacy briefs, published by the Children's Institute at UCT, found that Covid-19 and the associated lockdowns had a severe impact on child welfare, including child safety and mental health.
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
COVID-19 | China mass testing shows virus cases at six-month highChina on Wednesday reported its highest daily number of local coronavirus cases in months.
Read more »
COVID-19 herd immunity | It’s not going to happen, so what next?When politicians and others speak about herd immunity, unfortunately, they are under the misconception that the current tools we’ve got are adequate to eliminate the virus.
Read more »
Military nurses dance to bring cheer to patients battling Covid-19The popular 'It Ain't Me' remix sounded through 1 Military Hospital in Pretoria when ICU nurses danced to bring cheer to patients fighting Covid-19 and to uplift their own spirits.
Read more »
Masks or face shields: which offer better protection against Covid-19?Face shields are not as effective at protecting you or the people around you from respiratory droplets.
Read more »
Liberty suffers loss as it adds R1bn to Covid-19 provisionsStripping out Covid-19 reserves, normalised operating earnings were R652m during the review period
Read more »
555 new Covid-19 deaths recorded in SA in 24 hoursThere were 555 new Covid-19 deaths recorded in the past 24 hours, the National Institute for Communicable Diseases said on Tuesday.
Read more »