Equitable Pandemic Preparedness and Rapid Response: Lessons from COVID-19 for Pandemic Health Equity

Author:

Alberti Philip M.1,Lantz Paula M.2,Wilkins Consuelo H.3

Affiliation:

1. Association of American Medical Colleges

2. University of Michigan

3. Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Abstract

Abstract The novel coronavirus pandemic has set in high relief the entrenched health, social, racial, political, and economic inequities within American society as the incidence of severe morbidity and mortality from the disease caused by the virus appears to be much greater in black and other racial/ethnic minority populations, within homeless and incarcerated populations, and in lower-income communities in general. The reality is that the United States is ill equipped to realize health equity in prevention and control efforts for any type of health outcome, including an infectious disease pandemic. In this article, the authors address an important question: When new waves of the current pandemic emerge, or another novel pandemic emerges, how can the United States be better prepared and also ensure a rapid response that reduces rather than exacerbates social and health inequities? The authors argue for a health equity framework to pandemic preparedness that is grounded in meaningful community engagement and that, while recognizing the fundamental causes of social and health inequity, has a clear focus on upstream and midstream preparedness and downstream rapid response efforts that put social and health equity at the forefront.

Publisher

Duke University Press

Subject

Health Policy

Reference30 articles.

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2. Artiga Samantha , OrgeraKendal, PhamOlivia, and CoralloBradley. 2020. “Growing Data Underscore that Communities of Color Are Being Harder Hit by COVID-19.” Kaiser Family Foundation, Coronavirus Policy Watch, April21. kff.org/coronavirus-policy-watch/growing-data-underscore-communities-color-harder-hit-covid-19/.

3. ATSDR (Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry). 2018. “CDC's Social Vulnerability Index (SVI).” September12. svi.cdc.gov/index.html.

4. A New Twenty-First Century Science for Effective Epidemic Response;Bedford;Nature,2019

5. Pandemic Influenza Planning in the United States from a Health Disparities Perspective;Blumenshine;Emerging Infectious Diseases,2008

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