Myanmar COVID-19 Monitorıng

This report represents the main findings from the first round of village-level community assessment of the economic and social impacts monitoring of COVID-19 in Myanmar. A total of 224 individuals (four per village, selected for their knowledge of the situation of the village, and representativity of key sub-groups), were interviewed across 56 villages, in two townships in every state and region across the country. All interviews were conducted by phone in July 2020 and lasted approximately one hour each. The below findings are a snapshot of the situation as of July 2020, prior to the surge in case numbers in late August, at a time when many travel restrictions were lifted, and the official number of COVID-19 cases was around 350. Myanmar reported the country’s first cases of COVID-19 in late March 2020, followed shortly thereafter by confirmation of community transmission. In the following months, though testing was initially extremely limited, the Ministry of Health and Sports responded with robust contact tracing and implemented strict quarantine protocols for travelers entering Myanmar from abroad (primarily Myanmar citizens returning home), and for domestic and international cross-border migrants returning to their villages. Restrictions on domestic and international travel, as well as curfews and closures of businesses and schools, were implemented across the country before they were relaxed in June and July 2020. In April 2020, the Union government issued the COVID-19 Emergency Response Plan, which included steps taken by the government to control transmission and mitigate the economic and social impacts of both the virus and measures implemented to control its spread. Assistance from the Union government included provision of foodstuffs to poorer households, a moratorium on debt collection, a one-time cash payment to households in need, and a top-up in existing cash transfer programs targeting pregnant women, nursing mothers, and the elderly. Respondents indicated that fear of contamination was by far the main concern of villagers. However, evidence suggests that adherence to social distancing measures and government regulations waned over time. Compliance with government instructions was higher during the early stages of the pandemic response following the discovery of the virus in Myanmar. The community-level assessment investigates the impacts of COVID-19 in six focus areas: (i) health and behavior; (ii) livelihoods and migration; (iii) coping mechanisms; (iv) social relations; (v) leadership; and (vi) aid. In addition, the research was designed around several factors (markers), that may contribute to either deepening or mitigating the impacts of the pandemic.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2020-07
Subjects:CORONAVIRUS, COVID-19, PANDEMIC IMPACT, SOCIAL INCLUSION, HEALTH, QUARANTINE, LIVELIHOODS, JOB LOSS, MIGRATION, REMITTANCES, FOOD SECURITY, COPING STRATEGY, SOCIAL COHESION, GENDER, CRIME, SOCIAL PROTECTION, SOCIAL ASSISTANCE,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/327491604549861927/Myanmar-COVID-19-Monitorıng-Community-Assessment-Round-1
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/34763
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spelling dig-okr-10986347632024-08-07T18:45:57Z Myanmar COVID-19 Monitorıng Community Assessment, Round 1 World Bank CORONAVIRUS COVID-19 PANDEMIC IMPACT SOCIAL INCLUSION HEALTH QUARANTINE LIVELIHOODS JOB LOSS MIGRATION REMITTANCES FOOD SECURITY COPING STRATEGY SOCIAL COHESION GENDER CRIME SOCIAL PROTECTION SOCIAL ASSISTANCE This report represents the main findings from the first round of village-level community assessment of the economic and social impacts monitoring of COVID-19 in Myanmar. A total of 224 individuals (four per village, selected for their knowledge of the situation of the village, and representativity of key sub-groups), were interviewed across 56 villages, in two townships in every state and region across the country. All interviews were conducted by phone in July 2020 and lasted approximately one hour each. The below findings are a snapshot of the situation as of July 2020, prior to the surge in case numbers in late August, at a time when many travel restrictions were lifted, and the official number of COVID-19 cases was around 350. Myanmar reported the country’s first cases of COVID-19 in late March 2020, followed shortly thereafter by confirmation of community transmission. In the following months, though testing was initially extremely limited, the Ministry of Health and Sports responded with robust contact tracing and implemented strict quarantine protocols for travelers entering Myanmar from abroad (primarily Myanmar citizens returning home), and for domestic and international cross-border migrants returning to their villages. Restrictions on domestic and international travel, as well as curfews and closures of businesses and schools, were implemented across the country before they were relaxed in June and July 2020. In April 2020, the Union government issued the COVID-19 Emergency Response Plan, which included steps taken by the government to control transmission and mitigate the economic and social impacts of both the virus and measures implemented to control its spread. Assistance from the Union government included provision of foodstuffs to poorer households, a moratorium on debt collection, a one-time cash payment to households in need, and a top-up in existing cash transfer programs targeting pregnant women, nursing mothers, and the elderly. Respondents indicated that fear of contamination was by far the main concern of villagers. However, evidence suggests that adherence to social distancing measures and government regulations waned over time. Compliance with government instructions was higher during the early stages of the pandemic response following the discovery of the virus in Myanmar. The community-level assessment investigates the impacts of COVID-19 in six focus areas: (i) health and behavior; (ii) livelihoods and migration; (iii) coping mechanisms; (iv) social relations; (v) leadership; and (vi) aid. In addition, the research was designed around several factors (markers), that may contribute to either deepening or mitigating the impacts of the pandemic. 2020-11-10T15:21:36Z 2020-11-10T15:21:36Z 2020-07 Report Rapport Informe http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/327491604549861927/Myanmar-COVID-19-Monitorıng-Community-Assessment-Round-1 https://hdl.handle.net/10986/34763 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic CORONAVIRUS
COVID-19
PANDEMIC IMPACT
SOCIAL INCLUSION
HEALTH
QUARANTINE
LIVELIHOODS
JOB LOSS
MIGRATION
REMITTANCES
FOOD SECURITY
COPING STRATEGY
SOCIAL COHESION
GENDER
CRIME
SOCIAL PROTECTION
SOCIAL ASSISTANCE
CORONAVIRUS
COVID-19
PANDEMIC IMPACT
SOCIAL INCLUSION
HEALTH
QUARANTINE
LIVELIHOODS
JOB LOSS
MIGRATION
REMITTANCES
FOOD SECURITY
COPING STRATEGY
SOCIAL COHESION
GENDER
CRIME
SOCIAL PROTECTION
SOCIAL ASSISTANCE
spellingShingle CORONAVIRUS
COVID-19
PANDEMIC IMPACT
SOCIAL INCLUSION
HEALTH
QUARANTINE
LIVELIHOODS
JOB LOSS
MIGRATION
REMITTANCES
FOOD SECURITY
COPING STRATEGY
SOCIAL COHESION
GENDER
CRIME
SOCIAL PROTECTION
SOCIAL ASSISTANCE
CORONAVIRUS
COVID-19
PANDEMIC IMPACT
SOCIAL INCLUSION
HEALTH
QUARANTINE
LIVELIHOODS
JOB LOSS
MIGRATION
REMITTANCES
FOOD SECURITY
COPING STRATEGY
SOCIAL COHESION
GENDER
CRIME
SOCIAL PROTECTION
SOCIAL ASSISTANCE
World Bank
Myanmar COVID-19 Monitorıng
description This report represents the main findings from the first round of village-level community assessment of the economic and social impacts monitoring of COVID-19 in Myanmar. A total of 224 individuals (four per village, selected for their knowledge of the situation of the village, and representativity of key sub-groups), were interviewed across 56 villages, in two townships in every state and region across the country. All interviews were conducted by phone in July 2020 and lasted approximately one hour each. The below findings are a snapshot of the situation as of July 2020, prior to the surge in case numbers in late August, at a time when many travel restrictions were lifted, and the official number of COVID-19 cases was around 350. Myanmar reported the country’s first cases of COVID-19 in late March 2020, followed shortly thereafter by confirmation of community transmission. In the following months, though testing was initially extremely limited, the Ministry of Health and Sports responded with robust contact tracing and implemented strict quarantine protocols for travelers entering Myanmar from abroad (primarily Myanmar citizens returning home), and for domestic and international cross-border migrants returning to their villages. Restrictions on domestic and international travel, as well as curfews and closures of businesses and schools, were implemented across the country before they were relaxed in June and July 2020. In April 2020, the Union government issued the COVID-19 Emergency Response Plan, which included steps taken by the government to control transmission and mitigate the economic and social impacts of both the virus and measures implemented to control its spread. Assistance from the Union government included provision of foodstuffs to poorer households, a moratorium on debt collection, a one-time cash payment to households in need, and a top-up in existing cash transfer programs targeting pregnant women, nursing mothers, and the elderly. Respondents indicated that fear of contamination was by far the main concern of villagers. However, evidence suggests that adherence to social distancing measures and government regulations waned over time. Compliance with government instructions was higher during the early stages of the pandemic response following the discovery of the virus in Myanmar. The community-level assessment investigates the impacts of COVID-19 in six focus areas: (i) health and behavior; (ii) livelihoods and migration; (iii) coping mechanisms; (iv) social relations; (v) leadership; and (vi) aid. In addition, the research was designed around several factors (markers), that may contribute to either deepening or mitigating the impacts of the pandemic.
format Report
topic_facet CORONAVIRUS
COVID-19
PANDEMIC IMPACT
SOCIAL INCLUSION
HEALTH
QUARANTINE
LIVELIHOODS
JOB LOSS
MIGRATION
REMITTANCES
FOOD SECURITY
COPING STRATEGY
SOCIAL COHESION
GENDER
CRIME
SOCIAL PROTECTION
SOCIAL ASSISTANCE
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Myanmar COVID-19 Monitorıng
title_short Myanmar COVID-19 Monitorıng
title_full Myanmar COVID-19 Monitorıng
title_fullStr Myanmar COVID-19 Monitorıng
title_full_unstemmed Myanmar COVID-19 Monitorıng
title_sort myanmar covid-19 monitorıng
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2020-07
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/327491604549861927/Myanmar-COVID-19-Monitorıng-Community-Assessment-Round-1
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/34763
work_keys_str_mv AT worldbank myanmarcovid19monitorıng
AT worldbank communityassessmentround1
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