This study examines the impact of the Syrian conflict on the physical, mental, and social well-being of Syrians using data from the Gallup World Poll. Analysis of face-to-face interview data from 11,452 Syrian participants (2008-2015) reveals substantial declines across all three domains of well-being. The effects are widespread, impacting various demographics regardless of direct conflict exposure, suggesting nationwide spillover effects. Global data (1.7 million participants across 163 countries, 2006-2016) further demonstrates that Syria's well-being decline is unprecedented, exceeding that of other countries facing war, protests, or disasters. The findings underscore the urgent need for peace to restore well-being in Syria.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Aug 06, 2020
Authors
Felix Cheung, Amanda Kube, Louis Tay, Edward Diener, Joshua J. Jackson, Richard E. Lucas, Michael Y. Ni, Gabriel M. Leung
Tags
Syrian conflict
well-being
mental health
social impacts
Gallup World Poll
peace restoration
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