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cadolph at uw dot edu



← Journal articles

Pandemic Preparedness and COVID-19: An Exploratory Analysis of Infection and Fatality Rates, and Contextual Factors Associated with Preparedness in 177 Countries, from Jan 1, 2020, to Sept 30, 2021  

The Lancet, 2022, Vol. 399(10334), 1489–1512.

COVID-19 National Preparedness Collaborators [including Christopher Adolph]



Media Coverage  Washington Post · New York Times · The Guardian · Seattle Times · MSNBC · Christian Science Monitor

Pandemic-preparedness indices, which aim to measure health security capacity, were not meaningfully associated with standardised infection rates or IFRs. Measures of trust in the government and interpersonal trust, as well as less government corruption, had larger, statistically significant associations with lower standardised infection rates. High levels of government and interpersonal trust, as well as less government corruption, were also associated with higher COVID-19 vaccine coverage among middle-income and high-income countries where vaccine availability was more widespread, and lower corruption was associated with greater reductions in mobility. If these modelled associations were to be causal, an increase in trust of governments such that all countries had societies that attained at least the amount of trust in government or interpersonal trust measured in Denmark, which is in the 75th percentile across these spectrums, might have reduced global infections by 12.9% (5.7–17.8) for government trust and 40.3% (24.3–51.4) for interpersonal trust.

Supplementary materials can be found here.







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