Adopting an intersectional feminist lens, we explore our identities as single and co‐parents thrust into the new reality of the UK COVID‐19 lockdown. As two PhD students, we present shared reflections on our intersectional and divergent experiences of parenting and our attempts to protect our work and families during a pandemic. We reflect on the social constructions of ‘masculinities’ and ‘emphasized femininities’ as complicated influence on our roles as parents. Finally, we highlight the importance of time and self‐care as ways of managing our shared realities during this uncertain period. Through sharing reflections, we became closer friends in mutual appreciation and solidarity as we learned about each other’s struggles and vulnerabilities.
Intersectionality allows better understanding of the differences between individuals' experiences. In this article, I use intersectionality to explore how my lived experience of marginalization is different from one context to another. I reflect on how the nature of intersectionality and the intensity of oppression are altered by context. Grounded in a brief reflection of my fragmented experience in two different contexts, I explore how my identities and their intersection “mutate” from the Egyptian context to the UK context. Then, I reflect on how the intensity of oppression changed with this alteration in my intersectionality. In contextualizing my intersectional experience, first I problematize viewing intersectionality as a fixed acontextual ontology. Second, as a student immigrant and racialized minority in the United Kingdom, I seek to extend intersectionality and move beyond the traditional categories of race, class, gender, religion, and sexuality to include precarity as a pivotal social category that amplifies the intensity of oppression and marginalization, especially when intersected with race and gender. Finally, in sharing my reflection as a Middle Eastern woman, I contribute my unique experiences into the conversation, and a voice that has been muted, invisibled, marginalized, and excluded from the literature.
This paper orchestrates alterethnographical reflections in which we, women, polyphonically document, celebrate and vocalize the sound of change. This change is represented in Kamala Harris's appointment as the first woman, woman of color, and South Asian American as the US Vice President, breaking new boundaries of political leadership, and harvesting new gains for women in leadership and power more broadly. With feminist awareness and curiosity, we organize and mobilize individual texts into a multivocal paper as a way to write solidarity between women. Recognizing our intersectional differences, and power differentials inherent in our different positions in academic hierarchies, we unite to write about our collective concerns regarding gendered, racialised, classed social relations. Coming together across intersectional differences in a writing community has been a vehicle to speak, relate, share, and voice our feelings and thoughts to document this historic moment and build a momentum to fulfill our hopes for social change. As feminists, we accept our responsibility to make this history written, rather than manipulated or erased, by breaking the mold in the form of multi‐layered embodied texts to expand writing and doing research differently through re/writing otherness.
The COVID-19 pandemic, as an ongoing societal crisis, compounds pre-existing intersectional inequalities. Since the start of this crisis, those on the margins-women, single parents, LGBTQ+, Black, Asian, and Minority Ethnic peoplesand those living in precarity and poverty found themselves increasingly "othered. " As a group of academics who encounter gendered reality in disparate ways, we unite through this paper to prioritize a collective ethic of care as a counter-narrative to the "business as usual" rhetoric that endures as our oppressive reality. In responding to this special issue, a (dis)embodied alterethnographical text is offered, encompassing four evocative reflections on symbolic annihilation to "unmute" our individual voices. We present an inclusive discussion to connect our disconnected otherness, collectively resisting the dominant, patriarchal narratives, through non-linear, "messy writing. " Our contribution is threefold.First, we empirically contribute to dismantling heteronormative binarism by reclaiming our collective voices as a loud rebuttal to hegemony. Second, through collective conceptualizations of gendered crisis, we problematize theorizing gender from a unified conceptual lens to demonstrate the importance of an inclusive approach to feminism. Finally, a
Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is a new viral illness that affects not only the respiratory system but also leads to multiorgan involvement. Till now, no curative treatment is available; prevention is the only way to reduce the number of infected cases. Low serum level of vitamin D has been implicated in increased susceptibility to coronavirus infection and disease severity. However, there is no conclusive evidence as regards the role of vitamin D in COVID-19 infection and outcome. This study aimed to evaluate the serum level of Vit D in patients with COVID-19 and highlights its prognostic significance. A total of 109 COVID-19 patients' medical records were selected and retrospectively analyzed from Ohoud Hospital in Medina. Data collection was done in the period between 1/4/2020 and 22/2/2021 followed by statistical analysis. The median age for COVID-19 patients was 54 years old. The level of Vit-D was low in patients with COVID-19 with a median of 15.2 ng/ml. Serum ferritin was high in all COVID-19 patients with a median of 720.9 ng/ml. There was a significantly higher rate of developing severe forms of COVID-19 in males compared to females, P-value < 0.001. Serum vitamin D level was significantly lower in patients with COVID-19 compared to control with P-value < 0.001. More reduction in Vit-D level was detected in the severe form of COVID-19 (P-value 0.042). There were significantly lower levels of vitamin D and higher levels of ferritin in the server covid-19 cases, P-values of 0.018 and 0.001, respectively. Low serum Vitamin-D level was significantly associated with a higher risk of COVID-19 infection and a more severe form of the disease that may end by death. Vitamin D supplementation will provide a sufficient serum level of the vitamin that can prevent infection and or minimize COVID-19 severity. Keywords: COVID-19, vitamin D deficiency.
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