Report

Pandemic Preparedness for the Real World

Published on 10 March 2023

The cost of the Covid-19 pandemic remains unknown. Lives directly lost to the disease continue to mount, while related health, livelihood and wellbeing impacts are still being felt, and the wider ramifications across society, politics and the economy are yet to fully materialise.

What is known about these costs though, is that they have been unequally distributed both within and between countries. Preparedness plans proved inadequate in many settings – especially when it came to protecting those most vulnerable, including those marginalised by geography, poverty, or exclusion along the lines of religion, ethnicity or gender.

The top-down, surge-style, biomedically dominated and technologically driven preparedness approach that has dominated global health thinking and which was propelled into action with Covid-19 was found wanting not only on the grounds of effectiveness, but also of social justice. This presents both a challenge and an opportunity for a convergence of the preparedness and development agendas.

Drawing on a growing body of social science evidence, this report contends that securing health in the face of today’s uncertain disease threats in often unpredictable settings means making social, economic and political priorities as core to the preparedness agenda as biological and technological ones.

We present here a framework for a vision of pandemic preparedness for the real world – one that accepts that context is paramount, embraces inclusivity and justice, shifts power centres and rejects simplistic, one-size-fits-all solutions.

This report is available to download as a low resolution PDF.

Cite this publication

IDS (2023) Pandemic Preparedness for the Real World: Why We Must Invest in Equitable, Ethical and Effective Approaches to Help Prepare for the Next Pandemic, Brighton: Institute of Development Studies, DOI: 10.19088/CC.2023.002

Authors

Annie Wilkinson

Health and Nutrition Cluster Lead

Hayley MacGregor

Research Fellow

Ian Scoones

Professorial Fellow

Megan Schmidt-Sane

Research Fellow

Peter Taylor

Director of Research

Santiago Ripoll

Research Fellow

Shandana Khan Mohmand

Cluster leader and Research Fellow

Syed Abbas

Research Fellow

Tabitha Hrynick

Research Officer

Publication details

doi
10.19088/CC.2023.002
language
English

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