Health sector resilience and disaster management with respect to covid-19

Author: 
Shipra Garg (BDS, MPH)

In the moment of preparation of this paper, the world is still globally in grip of the Corona (COVID-19) crisis, and the need to understand the broader overall framework of the crisis increases. As in similar cases in the past, also with this one, the main interest is on the “first response”. Fully appreciating the efforts of those risking their lives facing pandemics, this paper tries to identify the main elements of the larger, possibly global, framework, supported by international standards, needed to deal with new (emerging) risks resulting from threats like Corona and assess the resilience of systems affected. The paper proposes that future solutions should include a number of new elements, related to both risk and resilience. That should include broadening the scope of attention, currently focused onto preparation and response phases, to the phases of “understanding risks”, including emerging risks, and transformation and adaptation. The paper suggests to use resilience indicators in this process. The proposed approach has been applied in different cases involving critical infrastructures (energy supply, water supply, transportation, etc., exposed to various threats). The detailed, indicator-based, resilience analysis included mapping resilience, resilience stress-testing, visualization, etc., showing, already before the COVID-19, the resilience (stress-testing) limits of the infrastructures. The paper links these results with the options available in the area of policies, standards, guidelines and tools (such as the Risk Radar), with focus on interdependencies and global standards, linking emerging risks and resilience.

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DOI: 
http://dx.doi.org/10.24327/ijcar.2021.24083.4773
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