Underlying vulnerabilities and inequalities compromise COVID-19 response: Perspectives on India and beyond

Publikation: Working paperPreprintForskning

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Underlying vulnerabilities and inequalities compromise COVID-19 response : Perspectives on India and beyond. / Shekhar, Himanshu ; Kumar, Parveen; Sharma, Richa; Moure, Mar; Sandholz, Simone; Hagenlocher, Michael; Werners, Saskia E.

2022.

Publikation: Working paperPreprintForskning

Harvard

Shekhar, H, Kumar, P, Sharma, R, Moure, M, Sandholz, S, Hagenlocher, M & Werners, SE 2022 'Underlying vulnerabilities and inequalities compromise COVID-19 response: Perspectives on India and beyond'. https://doi.org/10.31235/osf.io/8eztq

APA

Shekhar, H., Kumar, P., Sharma, R., Moure, M., Sandholz, S., Hagenlocher, M., & Werners, S. E. (2022). Underlying vulnerabilities and inequalities compromise COVID-19 response: Perspectives on India and beyond. https://doi.org/10.31235/osf.io/8eztq

Vancouver

Shekhar H, Kumar P, Sharma R, Moure M, Sandholz S, Hagenlocher M o.a. Underlying vulnerabilities and inequalities compromise COVID-19 response: Perspectives on India and beyond. 2022 jan. https://doi.org/10.31235/osf.io/8eztq

Author

Shekhar, Himanshu ; Kumar, Parveen ; Sharma, Richa ; Moure, Mar ; Sandholz, Simone ; Hagenlocher, Michael ; Werners, Saskia E. / Underlying vulnerabilities and inequalities compromise COVID-19 response : Perspectives on India and beyond. 2022.

Bibtex

@techreport{b8eab3f952a24f61866a2301f0d1910d,
title = "Underlying vulnerabilities and inequalities compromise COVID-19 response: Perspectives on India and beyond",
abstract = "The WHO recommends {\textquoteleft}testing, tracking and isolation{\textquoteright} of COVID-19 cases as the {\textquoteleft}backbone{\textquoteright} of pandemic response; these seemingly simple recommendations can be daunting for many countries in the Global South. In this commentary based on data from India, we dissect and exemplify some of the underlying vulnerabilities of the countries in the Global South that may impede effective implementation of WHO guidelines from the standpoint of vulnerability assessment and risk management. In the midst of urgent decision-making underlying vulnerabilities can be overlooked, as technical and logistical aspects take precedence. However, differentials in vulnerability can not only modulate the outbreak impact, but also the capacity and effectiveness of the response. Countries need to design their response with due consideration of existing capacity gaps and vulnerabilities to ensure a sustainable response that can avert knee-jerk reactions and minimize likely cascading effects.",
author = "Himanshu Shekhar and Parveen Kumar and Richa Sharma and Mar Moure and Simone Sandholz and Michael Hagenlocher and Werners, {Saskia E.}",
year = "2022",
month = jan,
doi = "10.31235/osf.io/8eztq",
language = "English",
type = "WorkingPaper",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Underlying vulnerabilities and inequalities compromise COVID-19 response

T2 - Perspectives on India and beyond

AU - Shekhar, Himanshu

AU - Kumar, Parveen

AU - Sharma, Richa

AU - Moure, Mar

AU - Sandholz, Simone

AU - Hagenlocher, Michael

AU - Werners, Saskia E.

PY - 2022/1

Y1 - 2022/1

N2 - The WHO recommends ‘testing, tracking and isolation’ of COVID-19 cases as the ‘backbone’ of pandemic response; these seemingly simple recommendations can be daunting for many countries in the Global South. In this commentary based on data from India, we dissect and exemplify some of the underlying vulnerabilities of the countries in the Global South that may impede effective implementation of WHO guidelines from the standpoint of vulnerability assessment and risk management. In the midst of urgent decision-making underlying vulnerabilities can be overlooked, as technical and logistical aspects take precedence. However, differentials in vulnerability can not only modulate the outbreak impact, but also the capacity and effectiveness of the response. Countries need to design their response with due consideration of existing capacity gaps and vulnerabilities to ensure a sustainable response that can avert knee-jerk reactions and minimize likely cascading effects.

AB - The WHO recommends ‘testing, tracking and isolation’ of COVID-19 cases as the ‘backbone’ of pandemic response; these seemingly simple recommendations can be daunting for many countries in the Global South. In this commentary based on data from India, we dissect and exemplify some of the underlying vulnerabilities of the countries in the Global South that may impede effective implementation of WHO guidelines from the standpoint of vulnerability assessment and risk management. In the midst of urgent decision-making underlying vulnerabilities can be overlooked, as technical and logistical aspects take precedence. However, differentials in vulnerability can not only modulate the outbreak impact, but also the capacity and effectiveness of the response. Countries need to design their response with due consideration of existing capacity gaps and vulnerabilities to ensure a sustainable response that can avert knee-jerk reactions and minimize likely cascading effects.

U2 - 10.31235/osf.io/8eztq

DO - 10.31235/osf.io/8eztq

M3 - Preprint

BT - Underlying vulnerabilities and inequalities compromise COVID-19 response

ER -

ID: 337586603