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1.
Anuario Mexicano de Derecho Internacional ; 23:339-364, 2023.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2321901

ABSTRACT

In the midst of a legitimacy crisis in investor-State dispute settlement regime, COVID-19 syndemic may lead States to the perfect storm as a result of the enlargement of the national policy space in order to tackle health, social and economic impacts. Thus, this piece aims to identify measures adopted by Latin American States which may be challenged by foreign investors' claims. It also addresses the protection of national policy space and argues that the roadmap for reshaping the regime should include the following options: 1) moratorium on pending disputes and restriction on future claims related to COVID-19 measures;2) introduction of counterclaims as a general rule;3) reference to right to regulate in investment agreements;4) exclusion of protected areas or policies. © 2023 Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico. All rights reserved.

2.
Nature Computational Science ; 2(9):595-604, 2022.
Article in English | EuropePMC | ID: covidwho-2062280

ABSTRACT

Similar policies in response to the COVID-19 pandemic have resulted in different success rates. Although many factors are responsible for the variances in policy success, our study shows that the micro-level structure of person-to-person interactions—measured by the average household size and in-person social contact rate—can be an important explanatory factor. To create an explainable model, we propose a network transformation algorithm to create a simple and computationally efficient scaled network based on these micro-level parameters, as well as incorporate national-level policy data in the network dynamic for SEIR simulations. The model was validated during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, which demonstrated that it can reproduce the dynamic ordinal ranking and trend of infected cases of various European countries that are sufficiently similar in terms of some socio-cultural factors. We also performed several counterfactual analyses to illustrate how policy-based scenario analysis can be performed rapidly and easily with these explainable models. © 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.

3.
19th International Joint Conference on Computer Science and Software Engineering, JCSSE 2022 ; 2022.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2018935

ABSTRACT

The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has wreaked havoc on social and economic systems worldwide. The variance in the rapidly increasing number of illnesses and deaths in each country is primarily due to national policies and actions. As a result, governments and institutions need to get insights into the critical factors influencing COVID-19 future case counts to properly manage the adverse effects of pandemics and promptly prepare appropriate measures. Thus, in this paper, we conduct extensive experiments on the real-world covid-19 datasets to examine the important factors influencing in the pandemic growth. In particular, we perform an exploratory data analysis to get the statistic and characteristics of multivariate time-series data on pandemic dynamic. Also, we utilize a statistical measure such as Pearson correlation to compute the relations of the past on the future daily new cases. The experimental results demonstrate that some restrictions have a positive effect on daily new confirmed cases at the early stage of the local pandemic transmission. Also, the results show that the early trend of COVID-19 can be explained well by human mobility in various categories. Thus, our proposed framework can be served as a guideline for future pandemic prevention and control decision-making. © 2022 IEEE.

4.
BMC Public Health ; 22(1): 1084, 2022 05 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1933123

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: A national policy for England, published in 2017, entitled 'Transforming Children and Young People's Mental Health Provision' aimed to address the increasing prevalence mental health problems in children and tackle inequalities. In the context of this policy's implementation as ongoing and the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic, the need for appropriate, timely and ongoing national government commitment is vital. METHODS: A narrative review using a problem representation evaluation [1], we critiqued the policy and related consultation documents using a social determinants of health perspective. We also reviewed wider policy discourses through engaging with stakeholder responses, providing an innovative methodological contribution to scholarship on public health policy and health inequalities. RESULTS: We found absences and oversights in relation to inequalities (most notably the lack of acknowledgement that mental health can cause inequalities), access, workforce capacity, and the impacts of cuts and austerity on service provision. We suggest these inadequacies may have been avoided if stakeholder responses to the consultation process had been more meaningfully addressed. We illustrate how 'problems' are discursively created through the process of policy development, justified using specific types of evidence, and that this process is politically motivated. Local policy makers have a critical role in translating and adapting national policy for their communities but are constrained by absences and oversights in relation to health inequalities. CONCLUSIONS: This narrative review illustrates how policy discourse frames and produces 'problems', and how the evidence used is selected and justified politically. This review contributes to the existing transdisciplinary field of knowledge about how using methods from political and social science disciplines can reveal new insights when critiquing and influencing policy approaches to health inequalities.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Mental Health , Adolescent , COVID-19/epidemiology , Child , Health Policy , Health Status Disparities , Humans , Pandemics , Referral and Consultation
6.
International Journal of Energy Economics and Policy ; 12(2):20-29, 2022.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-1789933

ABSTRACT

This study aims to analyze the impact of the COVID-19 on the energy sector in Jordan. The steps taken by the Jordanian governments to mitigate the economic and financial impacts that would enhance the resilience of the energy sector was considered. Deductive and inductive analysis methods were used. Such methods aided to systematically consider the economic consequences of the COVID-19. The results of this study showed that the COVID-19 led to a significant decrease in energy consumption, a decline in economic growth, a significant rise in unemployment, an increase in market instability, and a decrease in the financial position of companies. The recommendations concluded that Jordan should begin to change its policies according to the new data, and take measures to advance the energy sector by reducing fuel consumption and directing investment in energy saving policies and infrastructure equipment in parallel with the population boom in Jordan. © 2022, Econjournals. All rights reserved.

7.
21st IEEE International Conference on Environment and Electrical Engineering and 2021 5th IEEE Industrial and Commercial Power System Europe, EEEIC / I and CPS Europe 2021 ; 2021.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-1759021

ABSTRACT

This paper presents a statistical analysis on producers' data collected between 2015 and 2020 by the DSO in the city of Terni (Italy). The integration of prosumers with the electrical system is investigated through appropriate indicators, such as self-consumption and self-sufficiency, the case study is placed within the Italian and International scenario and enriched with comments and observations. In particular, effects of Covid-19 pandemic to prosumers' behaviour are reported, highlighting an increasing of self-consumption by domestic prosumers, in line with the European and national policy. © 2021 IEEE

8.
Front Digit Health ; 3: 754319, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1607849

ABSTRACT

Requirements for physical distancing as a result of COVID-19 and the need to reduce the risk of infection prompted policy supporting rapid roll out of video consulting across the four nations of the UK-England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. Drawing on three studies of the accelerated implementation and uptake of video consulting across the four nations, we present a comparative and interpretive policy analysis of the spread and scale-up of video consulting during the pandemic. Data include interviews with 59 national level stakeholders, 55 health and social care staff and 30 patients, 20 national documents, responses to a UK-wide survey of NHS staff and analysis of routine activity data. Sampling ensured variations in geography, clinical context and adoption progress across the combined dataset. Comparative analysis was guided by theory on policy implementation and crisis management. The pandemic provided a "burning platform" prompting UK-wide policy supporting the use of video consulting in health care as a critical means of managing the risk of infection and a standard mode of provision. This policy push facilitated interest in video consulting across the UK. There was, however, marked variation in how this was put into practice across the four nations. Pre-existing infrastructure, policies and incentives for video consulting in Scotland, combined with a collaborative system-level approach, a program dedicated to developing video-based services and resourcing and supporting staff to deliver them enabled widespread buy-in and rapid spread. In England, Wales and Northern Ireland, pre-existing support for digital health (e.g., hardware, incentives) and virtual care, combined with reduced regulation and "light touch" procurement managed to override some (but by no means all) cultural barriers and professional resistance to implementing digital change. In Northern Ireland and Wales, limited infrastructure muted spread. In all three countries, significant effort at system level to develop, review and run video consulting programs enabled a substantial number of providers to change their practice, albeit variably across settings. Across all four nations ongoing uncertainty, potential restructuring and tightening of regulations, along with difficulties inherent in addressing inequalities in digital access, raise questions about the longer-term sustainability of changes to-date.

9.
Child Sch ; 43(2): 79-88, 2021 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1528159

ABSTRACT

The novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic has created unprecedented impacts on our schools and society, requiring school social workers (SSWs) to attend to layered and cascading effects for students and their families. This study presents rich qualitative data from a national survey of SSWs about their personal and professional roles supporting students, families, and staff members as schools shifted to remote instruction. Findings indicate that SSWs are highly concerned about a lack of basic needs resources, including food, housing, and mental health support for students and families. SSWs highlighted the unequal effects of school closures for families without technology and Internet access as well as the difficulties providing services during the pandemic. Recovery policies should target resources to schools with the highest needs while prioritizing food, housing, mental health, and access to tools for online learning. SSWs also need additional and refined professional support to overcome their isolated roles in schools and bolster their ability to deliver online services effectively.

10.
Prim Health Care Res Dev ; 22: e57, 2021 10 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1492990

ABSTRACT

AIM: To explore the extent to which national policy in end-of-life care (EOLC) in England influences and guides local practice, helping to ensure that care for older people at the EOL is of a consistently good quality. BACKGROUND: Whilst policy is recognised as an important component in determining the effectiveness of EOLC, there is scant literature which attempts to interrogate how this happens or to hypothesise the mechanisms linking policy to better outcomes. METHOD: This article reports on the second phase of a realist evaluation comprising three case studies of clinical commissioning groups, including 98 in-depth interviews with stakeholders, meeting observation and documentary analysis. FINDINGS: This study reveals the key contextual factors which need to be in place at micro, meso and macro levels if good quality EOLC for older people is to be achieved. The findings provide insight into rising local inequalities and reveal areas of dissonance between stakeholder priorities. Whilst patients privilege the importance of receiving care and compassion in familiar surroundings at EOL, there remains a clear tension between this and the medical drive to cure disease and extend life. The apparent devaluing of social care and subsequent lack of resource has impacted significantly on the way in which dying is experienced.Patient experience at EOL, shaped by the care received both formally and informally, is driven by a fragmented health and social care system. Whilst the importance of system integration appears to have been recognised, significant challenges remain in terms of shaping policy to adequately reflect this. This study highlights the priority attached by patients and their families to the social and relational aspect of death and dying and shines a light on the stark disparities between the health and social care systems which became even more evident at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Terminal Care , Aged , Death , Humans , Pandemics , Policy , SARS-CoV-2
11.
Health Policy ; 125(8): 957-971, 2021 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1252927

ABSTRACT

Coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) has had a significant impact on the world. Different countries introduced various public health and social measures (PHSMs) against the coronavirus. This paper aims to (a) examine how national policies on PHSMs were framed and which PHSMs were adopted; (b) compare the similarities and differences of PHSMs advocated by different countries; and (c) examine whether these measures have changed with time. We performed a content analysis of 160 COVID-19 policy documents on the websites of the WHO and ten countries' government websites on COVID-19 between December 1, 2019 and May 31, 2020. Results showed that although the initial responses to COVID-19 in different countries varied, there was a homogenization of PHSMs over time: by May 31, 2020, almost all the countries we studied implemented the major PHSMs that the WHO recommended, except Sweden, which applied only part of the major PHSMs recommended by the WHO. The differences among countries were in the speediness, strictness and resourcefulness of the PHSMs implementation. We suggest that a timely and effective utilization of the integrated package of health measures with the support of adequate resources may help the efficient implementation of PHSMs.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Public Health , Government , Humans , SARS-CoV-2 , Sweden
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