Frontiers in Public Health (Jun 2022)

Global Health Needs Modernized Containment Strategies to Prepare for the Next Pandemic

  • Krish Seetah,
  • Krish Seetah,
  • Krish Seetah,
  • Krish Seetah,
  • Hannah Moots,
  • David Pickel,
  • Marit Van Cant,
  • Marit Van Cant,
  • Alessandra Cianciosi,
  • Alessandra Cianciosi,
  • Erin Mordecai,
  • Mark Cullen,
  • Yvonne Maldonado

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2022.834451
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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COVID-19 continues to be a public health crisis, while severely impacting global financial markets causing significant economic and social hardship. As with any emerging disease, pharmaceutical interventions required time, emphasizing the initial and continuing need for non-pharmaceutical interventions. We highlight the role of anthropological and historical perspectives to inform approaches to non-pharmaceutical interventions for future preparedness. The National Academy of Medicine, a not-for-profit, non-governmental US-based medical watchdog organization, published a key document early in the COVID-19 pandemic which points to inadequate quarantine and containment infrastructure as a significant obstacle to an effective pandemic response. In considering how to implement effective quarantine policies and infrastructure, we argue that it is essential to take a longitudinal approach to assess interventions that have been effective in past pandemics while simultaneously addressing and eliminating the negative socio-historical legacies of ineffective quarantine practices. Our overview reinforces the need for social equity and compassion when implementing containment.

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