Source Alert

Coronavirus is latest calamity to affect young people’s psyche

The coronavirus outbreak exacts a hidden toll on young adults as it shapes values and harms their health. It’s the latest calamity for a generation that has experienced life-altering disruptions, from 9/11 to the Great Recession, the decline of American prestige to a housing affordability crisis, global warming to crushing student debt, and now a pandemic. And new medical evidence shows the disease strikes young Americans harder than expected, as explained by USC experts.

March 25, 2020

 

Contact: Gary Polakovic c-(323) 527-7770 or polakovi@usc.edu

Coronavirus is a formative experience for young adults

Richard Flory is photographed in a portrait style photo, wearing a blazer and flannel, smiling into the camera.Richard Flory, senior director of research and evaluation at the Center for Religion and Civic Culture at the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences.

“This [COVID-19] crisis will be one of the formative experiences of most young people’s lives. They are watching how their parents, cities, schools and government act. It’s putting into high relief the inability of large-scale institutions to address these issues,” Flory said.

He added:

  • Young people see institutional failure to meet the needs of U.S. society.
  • Youth support for Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders and climate activist Greta Thunberg underscore the new worldview.
  • Young people distrust institutions and rely more on family or a circle of friends.
  • Hyper-individualism within U.S. society reduces the public sphere in which people can act together.

Flory is an expert in religion and urban life, civic engagement and young people. He is author of a new book about young people emerging as adults.

Contact: rflory@usc.edu or (213) 743-1606

Fewer babies signal “barometer of despair” for young couples

Dowell Myers is photographed outside, portrait style, wearing a business suit, he is looking into the camera. Dowell Myers, professor of urban planning and demography at the USC Price School of Public Policy and director of the Population Dynamics Research Group.

“The biggest barometer of despair for young people is birthrates are way down in the last six years. You have to be hopeful to bring a baby into the world and birthrates are higher when people feel optimistic, but young people today are mired in negativity that surrounds on all fronts. It’s very different than how the Baby Boom generation grew up,” Myers said.

He added:

  • Young people are putting off getting married and having children due to housing costs and economic insecurity.
  • Declining birthrates — about 200,000 fewer babies are born annually in the United States than in 2015 — have long-term implications for tax revenue, Social Security and economic growth.
  • COVID-19 outbreak is the latest disruption for young people who’ve faced global warming, unaffordable housing, student debt, political instability and the Great Recession.
  • Women feel the stresses more, so they have fewer babies.

Myers is an expert in demographic change, housing impacts, workforce and education, and the future of California.

Contact: dowell@usc.edu or (213) 740-7095.

Young folks, this ain’t your daddy’s world anymore

Brie Loskota is photographed portrait style in a library. She is wearing a blazer and blouse, and smiling while looking into the camera.Brie Loskota, executive director for the Center for Religion and Civic Culture at the Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences.

“Many young people see the world systems their grandparents or great grandparents built as highly vulnerable and inadequate to the challenges of the world today, so they don’t invest in authorities outside their control. It’s not something they care much about; they have no reason to trust it because they’ve only seen failure after failure. It’s not an irrational fear,” Loskota said.

She added:

  • Frayed societal connections lead to a “benign liberalism” of everyone pursing their own thing.
  • Social media builds a semblance of community yet can foster relationships lacking depth and durability and make it easy to avoid people one deems uncomfortable.
  • Creating a curated world skews perceptions of reality, of how other people behave and what’s important for society.
  • Such disassociation manifests in opinion polls, spring break students massed at Florida beaches despite coronavirus risk, and low youth voter turnout at the ballot box.

Loskota is an expert in religion in Southern California, faith-based organizations and initiatives, security, conflict and international affairs, and emergency preparedness and disasters.

Contact: bloskota@usc.edu or (567) 307-0207

Disease outbreak forces big questions on young adults

Diane Winston is photographed from the neck up, and she is smiling and looking into the camera. Diane Winston, associate professor and Knight Chair in Media and Religion at the USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism.

“Millennials and Gen-Zer’s are not usually mired in deep questions about religion, but now they are grappling with questions of meaning, morality and mortality in ways they never did before. Like all of us, they are confronted with daily decisions about where they go, who they see and what to do — decisions with spiritual resonance and ethical dimensions,” Winston said.

She added:

  • Millennials comprise the biggest portion — 36% — of Americans who profess no religious identity.
  • Surveys show about 70% of young people believe in God and feel a sense of wonder about the universe at least once a month.
  • Only one in five Millennials believe in clear standards for right and wrong.
  • Who’s taking the COVID-19 threat seriously? Many times, it’s Millennials cautioning Boomer parents to take precautions.

Winston is an expert in religion and media, society and politics. She’s an author of two books related to such subjects.

Contact: dianewin@usc.edu or (213) 821-5388

COVID-19 infects 20- to 40-year-olds more than expected

Irving Steinberg is photographed outside, wearing a lab coat and dress shirt with tie. He is smiling and looking into the camera.Irving Steinberg, associate professor of clinical pharmacy and pediatrics at the USC School of Pharmacy and the Keck School of Medicine of USC.

“Fast-tracked journal articles published within the last week or so report on similarities and differences among pediatric and adult patients with COVID-19 infection. Most disturbing are the increasing numbers of severe illness and fatalities in the 20- to 44-year-old segment in the U.S.,” Steinberg said.

He added:

  • The casual attitude of young people toward the coronavirus is at odds with the reality of what doctors see.
  • 1 in 5 people hospitalized for COVID-19 infection are 20- to 44-year-olds, according to a recent analysis by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
  • More than 1 in 8 of the young people were admitted to intensive care, according to the CDC.
  • Young adults are not immune to coronavirus. “Lower risk should never be confused with no risk,” he said.

Steinberg is an expert in pediatric pharmacotherapeutics, infectious diseases and maternal-fetal drug exposure.

Contact: isteinbe@usc.edu

 

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