Skip to main content
Advertise with the Morning Star
Young Scots speak on Covid experiences
A person dripping testing solution into a Covid 19 lateral flow testing strip

CHILDREN and young people have spoken of the lessons policy-makers must learn as they share their experiences of the pandemic in a new report published today.

Let’s Be Heard, the Scottish Covid-19 inquiry public participation project, spoke to over 2,000 young people from across the country to examine impacts on education, social development and mental health.

Two-thirds told the project that they had faced difficulties with online learning when schools closed for lockdown, missing-out on “formative moments” such as the transition from primary to secondary education.

Some, particularly those in college or university, also described feeling “overlooked” during the crisis, while in sectors such as retail and hospitality young workers told of facing “stressful encounters” with the public while also being put at heightened risk of exposure to the virus.

As well as calling for better communications with young people in any future pandemic, respondents called for greater support for young people living in challenging domestic situations, such as young carers who faced greater caring responsibilities, greater isolation and increased anxiety for their loved-ones’ health during the pandemic. 

The study also heard calls for better mental health support through Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services, widening its eligibility criteria and working to cut waiting times which often run to over a year.

Project chief Dr Alexandra Anderson said: “We are very grateful to everyone who took part in Let’s Be Heard, including the children and young people who engaged with us to share their experiences of the pandemic.

“It is important to hear their voices. The valuable insights, themes and observations from their responses give them an opportunity to contribute to the inquiry’s work.” 

The Scottish government was contacted for comment.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Raeda Alian, who was evacuated from Gaza City, wipes a tear as she sits next to her belongings after arriving at a camp for displaced Palestinians in Muwasi, an area that Israel has designated as a ‘safe zone’, in Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip, September 23, 2025
Middle East / 26 September 2025
26 September 2025
Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament / 26 September 2025
26 September 2025
Jeremy Corbyn calls for a Gaza inquiry during a march for Palestine in central London, May 21 2025
Aw That / 27 September 2025
27 September 2025

It’s hard to understand how minor divisions can come to dominate the process of building a challenge to the rule of the rich when the desperate need for a vehicle to fight poverty and despair is so abundantly clear, writes MATT KERR

Prime Minister Keir Starmer and US President Donald Trump during a press conference at Chequers, near Aylesbury in Buckinghamshire, on day two of the president's second state visit to the UK, September 18, 2025
Scotland / 25 September 2025
25 September 2025
Similar stories
Oliver Snelling, The Floating One, 2023, Carved Purbeck Grub Bed (limestone)
Features / 2 August 2025
2 August 2025

OLIVER SNELLING, a south London stonecarver and yeoman stonemason, relates how he is helping bring about a new festival next month

ELITE ENDORSEMENT: Keir Starmer hosts Adolescence writer Jac
Features / 9 April 2025
9 April 2025
The series unveils uncomfortable truths about youth alienation and online radicalisation — but the real crisis lies in austerity and the absence of class consciousness in addressing young people’s disillusionment, says teacher ROBERT POOLE
Bereaved families demonstrate outside Dorland House in Londo
Britain / 6 December 2024
6 December 2024