Jurnal Populasi
Vol 28, No 2 (2020)

Women’s Resilience and Vulnerability in Facing COVID-19 in DKI Jakarta and East Java

Ashilly Achidsti (LP3M Universitas Nahdlatul Ulama, Yogyakarta)
Oktafia Kusuma Sari (Department of Politics and Government, Faculty of Social and Political Sciences, Universitas Gadjah Mada, Yogyakarta.)
Desy Putri Ratnasari (Department of Bioethics, Graduate School, Universitas Gadjah Mada, Yogyakarta.)
Nourmalita Safitri Ningsih (Garden Petshop and Clinic, Jakarta.)
Aulia Reski Widyaningrum (Molecular Biology Laboratory, Universitas Indonesia Hospital, Depok.)
Jaler Sekar Maji (PT. Widya Informasi Nusantara, Yogyakarta.)
Muhammad Uwais Sidhi Weiss (Department of Communication Studies, Faculty of Social and Political Sciences, Universitas Gadjah Mada, Yogyakarta.)
Sahal Sabilil Muttaqin (Faculty of Biology, Universitas Gadjah Mada, Yogyakarta.)



Article Info

Publish Date
21 Jan 2021

Abstract

Indonesia ranks 23rd as the most COVID-19 confirmed cases in the world. DKI Jakarta and East Java provinces have the highest cases in Indonesia. However, data on the transmission of COVID-19 in both provinces were not further analyzed regarding vulnerability between genders. This research attempted to compare the differences in the gender distribution of COVID-19 cases by analyzing data from COVID-19 DKI Jakarta and East Java Task Force Information Center and various biological, medical, and socio-cultural studies to understand risk of women being exposed to COVID-19. The results of this research revealed that both provinces had a higher number of confirmed patients under surveillance (PDP), people under surveillance (ODP), and death cases in men than that of women. In DKI Jakarta, the number of recovered cases in men was higher than that of women, but in East Java it was not significantly different. Based on literature reviews, women were more resilience in manifestations of COVID-19 severity than that of men due to differences in ACE2 gene distribution and expression, hormones regulations, immune responses, comorbidities, and ages. However, data from socio-cultural literature reviews in both provinces showed women were vulnerable to be exposed to COVID-19 since many women performed as health workers, office workers, market traders, public transportation users, and did religious activities. Besides, women were vulnerable due to mental health condition, such as depression, anxiety, and special medical condition (e.g. being exposed to or infected with COVID-19 during pregnancy).

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Journal Info

Abbrev

populasi

Publisher

Subject

Arts Humanities

Description

Populasi is a journal discussing population and policy issues. Populasi is published regularly twice a year in June and December. The Editorial Board receives manuscripts based on research, both on theoretical and empirical, related to population, policy, poverty, family planning, reproduction ...