COVID-19 in Ghana: Changes and the Way Forward
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Journal of Comparative Family Studies
Abstract
As a lower-middle income country, Ghana is noted for having a
progressive economy, health system, and family trends. However, COVID-19, with
it associated restrictions, has brought changes to various aspects of Ghanaians’
lives. In this paper, we review information from government websites, online media
websites, social media, academic articles, and anecdotal evidence to track changes
brought about by the pandemic. Specifically, we focus on economic well-being,
education and schooling, family interaction, mental health and communication in
community as well ethnic, cultural, and social class variations. Findings show that
the COVID-19 pandemic is changing life for all Ghanaians, notably by reinforcing
existing inequalities and highlighting previously known gaps in service, coverage,
and access across multiple sectors, including healthcare, business and education.
Family patterns are changing for both the nuclear and extended family units. The
pandemic has created both challenges and opportunities for parents to engage
with their children. Anxiety levels are heightened and psychological services have
consequently been made widely available. Education has slowly and unevenly gone
virtual. Further, the crisis has generated local innovations to meet the nation’s needs
during the pandemic. The findings call for national reforms in the production and
distribution of goods and services in all sectors as well as empirical work into the
long-term effects of the pandemic on Ghanaians.
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Research Article