In the past 100 years, the world has faced four distinctly different pandemics: the Spanish flu of 1918-1919, the SARS pandemic of 2003, the H1N1 or “swine flu” pandemic of 2012, and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Each public health crisis exposed specific systemic shortfalls and provided public health lessons for future events. The Spanish flu revealed a nursing shortage and led to a great appreciation of nursing as a profession. SARS showed the importance of having frontline clinicians be able to work with regulators and those producing guidelines. H1N1 raised questions about the nature of a global organization such as the World Health Organization in terms of the benefits and potential disadvantages of leading the fight against a long-term global public health threat. In the era of COVID-19, it seems apparent that we are learning about both the blessing and curse of social media.
CITATION STYLE
Pergolizzi, J. V., Lequang, J. A., Taylor, R., Wollmuth, C., Nalamachu, M., Varrassi, G., … Magnusson, P. (2021). Four pandemics: Lessons learned, lessons lost. Signa Vitae. Pharmamed Mado Ltd. https://doi.org/10.22514/sv.2020.16.0096
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