Current Impact and Long-Term Influence of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Global and Public Health, Public Policy and Healthcare Systems: Socio-Economic Aspects – Series of Case Studies
A special issue of Epidemiologia (ISSN 2673-3986).
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 August 2022) | Viewed by 47411
Special Issue Editors
Interests: global health; public health; travel and migrant health medicine; biomathematics
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: global health governance and diplomacy; drug policy; HIV/AIDS; tuberculosis; hepatitis; COVID-19
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: epidemic modeling; structure and dynamics of complex systems; complex networks; modeling of social behavior
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
The COVID-19 pandemic represents a major challenge for health systems around the world. As cases increased at staggering rates across the globe, health systems were overwhelmed, with many pushed to operate at or beyond capacity level. The short-term priority was to provide emergency care in a crisis.
Such unprecedented pressure is likely to have repercussions for the general population that will continue long after the pandemic is over, and this is especially true for currently un- or under-addressed chronic diseases, mental health, and the health consequences of prolonged economic decline.
All countries will soon have to address some of the long-term challenges associated with the pandemic, such as the deployment of mass vaccinations and revaccinations, the consequences of long-term COVID-19 syndrome, and the need for permanent preventive and mitigative measures against the reemergence of the epidemic—all of which present unique public health challenges for which systems must be prepared.
Therefore, it is important and relevant to highlight strategic priorities for reconfiguring healthcare systems.
Successfully tackling pandemics requires many dimensions of multilateral cooperation. COVID-19 continues to present challenges and opportunities, and while the fast development and approval of vaccines and EU-wide vaccine passports have been successful, the pandemic has contributed to an increasing global divide. The EU, the US, the UK and the Commonwealth, Russia, China (for all their sphere of influence), and the developing countries all have different strategies for pandemic response, with weak cooperation and information exchange between these regions. Understanding the differences between the various approaches, and further consideration on how international cooperation could be improved to increase the efficiency of pandemics mitigation measures worldwide, is fundamental.
Prof. Dr. Antoine Flahault
Prof. Dr. Michel Kazatchkine
Dr. Liudmila Rozanova
Sana de Courcelles
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- COVID-19
- public health
- global health
- healthcare systems
- public policy
- socioeconomic impact
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