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Early Warnings: The Lessons of COVID-19 for Public Health Climate Preparedness

Mary C. Sheehan, Mary A. Fox

2020International Journal of Health Services67 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The early 2020 response to COVID-19 revealed major gaps in public health systems around the world as many were overwhelmed by a quickly-spreading new coronavirus. While the critical task at hand is turning the tide on COVID-19, this pandemic serves as a clarion call to governments and citizens alike to ensure public health systems are better prepared to meet the emergencies of the future, many of which will be climate-related. Learning from the successes as well as the failures of the pandemic response provides some guidance. We apply several recommendations of a recent World Health Organization Policy Brief on COVID-19 response to 5 key areas of public health systems - governance, information, services, determinants, and capacity - to suggest early lessons from the coronavirus pandemic for climate change preparedness. COVID-19 has demonstrated how essential public health is to well-functioning human societies and how high the economic cost of an unprepared health system can be. This pandemic provides valuable early warnings, with lessons for building public health resilience.

Topics & Concepts

Public healthCLARIONPreparednessPandemicResilience (materials science)Public relationsPolitical scienceCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Government (linguistics)BusinessPsychological resilienceCorporate governanceEconomic growthMedicineEconomicsPsychologyNursingInfectious disease (medical specialty)LawDiseaseThermodynamicsFinancePsychotherapistLinguisticsPhysicsPathologyPhilosophyCognitive psychologyClimate Change and Health ImpactsGlobal Health Care IssuesGlobal Public Health Policies and Epidemiology