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VULNERABLE10
job losses, economic recession, increased mental health issues, and ris-
ing domestic violence. In the longer run, we will have to account for
both sides of the ledger, namely the people who were saved because
of precautionary measures and the people who were lost or harmed.
Fourth, we do not yet know which of the various approaches taken
by governments to combat COVID-19 are most effective. This will be
important to know when responding to further waves of infection.
Some claim that Japan has been relatively successful because people
commonly and willingly wear masks. Others suggest that the strict
separation of suspected COVID-19 patients into separate hospitals
or treatment facilities is key. Many analyses refer to the importance
of testing and tracing, or the importance of acting early and closing
borders. Others promote a strong focus on high-risk populations in
long-term care settings, prisons, factories, and other sites. We need
detailed scientific research into the range of approaches taken and the
factors that determine their efficacy in order to understand the impact
of different approaches on different vulnerable groups.
Vulnerability as an Organizing Theme
We employ a lens of vulnerability throughout our analysis. COVID-19
has exposed and created vulnerabilities that follow the fault lines of pre-
existing structural inequities. COVID-19 has flourished in settings where
people were already vulnerable because of government policies and cor-
porate bottom lines. Many of the virus’s hot spots in high-income coun-
tries (HICs)—long-term care homes, prisons, immigration detention
centres, and slaughterhouses, among others—are spaces of acute vul-
nerability because they are sites of long-standing structural inequalities.
Governments have long tolerated substandard quality of care in
long-term care homes, caused by, among other things, understaffing
and low wages.34 Oversight of public and private long-term care facili-
ties varies between jurisdictions, but is often inadequate. In Ontario,
for example, annual inspections have essentially evaporated in the
global-development/2020/may/13/unicef-6000-children-could-die-every-day-
due-to-impact-of-coronavirus>.
34. Martine Lagacé, Linda Garcia & Louise Bélanger-Hardy, this volume,
Chapter D-2; Matthew Kupfer, “‘Something Is Bound to Break’: More Long-Term
Care Staff Needed, Families Say”, CBC News (23 April 2020), online: <https://
www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/madonna-care-community-orleans-staff-
recruit-1.5541610>.
VULNERABLE
The Law, Policy and Ethics of COVID-19
- Titel
- VULNERABLE
- Untertitel
- The Law, Policy and Ethics of COVID-19
- Autoren
- Vanessa MacDonnell
- Jane Philpott
- Sophie Thériault
- Sridhar Venkatapuram
- Verlag
- Ottawa Press
- Datum
- 2020
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
- ISBN
- 9780776636429
- Abmessungen
- 15.2 x 22.8 cm
- Seiten
- 648
- Kategorien
- Coronavirus
- International