This Article is not a thorough-going history of the pandemic response. By way of critique and suggesting a way forward for public health, we are going to imagine how public health—both the official agencies and the interconnected nodes in academia and health systems—might have approached COVID-19 differently. This is a story that focuses on good judgment as the lynchpin of optimal pandemic response and allows us to think about where good judgment seems to have been lacking, and how public health culture and institutions might change to improve the chances of better judgment next time
When the first suspected human-to-human transmission of the novel coronavirus was reported in Januar...
The US lacks a robust pandemic prevention framework. Travis Bean offers an account of pandemic histo...
In several countries worldwide, the initial response to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has been...
The COVID-19 pandemic revealed stark differences in governmental preparedness across the globe. The ...
Current discussions of pandemic influenza and emergency preparedness would do well to heed the lesso...
The world is currently facing the worst pandemic in a century and we were caught unprepared. COVID-1...
COVID-19 has caused an unprecedented health crisis in the United States and the world. The article c...
This Article examines three questions: What is public health? What is public health law? What roles ...
This chapter is part of an edited volume studying and comparing federalist government responses to t...
Abstract. The COVID-19 pandemic gave minimal reaction time to governments around the world. While ca...
In this Scientific American opinion article, Thoai Ngô argues for critical long-term changes in how ...
The Covid-19 pandemic presents argumentation theorists with an opportunity to reflect on the ways in...
Introduction. Assessments of the response to the COVID-19 pandemic so far are negative. They can be ...
Responses to epidemics, pandemics, and other biological disasters require multiple coordinated initi...
This is a short postscript to the Public Health Ethics special issue on the legal determinants of he...
When the first suspected human-to-human transmission of the novel coronavirus was reported in Januar...
The US lacks a robust pandemic prevention framework. Travis Bean offers an account of pandemic histo...
In several countries worldwide, the initial response to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has been...
The COVID-19 pandemic revealed stark differences in governmental preparedness across the globe. The ...
Current discussions of pandemic influenza and emergency preparedness would do well to heed the lesso...
The world is currently facing the worst pandemic in a century and we were caught unprepared. COVID-1...
COVID-19 has caused an unprecedented health crisis in the United States and the world. The article c...
This Article examines three questions: What is public health? What is public health law? What roles ...
This chapter is part of an edited volume studying and comparing federalist government responses to t...
Abstract. The COVID-19 pandemic gave minimal reaction time to governments around the world. While ca...
In this Scientific American opinion article, Thoai Ngô argues for critical long-term changes in how ...
The Covid-19 pandemic presents argumentation theorists with an opportunity to reflect on the ways in...
Introduction. Assessments of the response to the COVID-19 pandemic so far are negative. They can be ...
Responses to epidemics, pandemics, and other biological disasters require multiple coordinated initi...
This is a short postscript to the Public Health Ethics special issue on the legal determinants of he...
When the first suspected human-to-human transmission of the novel coronavirus was reported in Januar...
The US lacks a robust pandemic prevention framework. Travis Bean offers an account of pandemic histo...
In several countries worldwide, the initial response to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has been...