COVID-19: Implications for Nursing and Health Care in the United States.
Nancy R ReynoldsDeborah BakerRita D'AoustMaria DocalNancy GoldsteinLisa GrubbMelissa deCardi HladekBinu KoiralaKaran KvernoCatherine LingNada LukkahataiKimberly McIltrotVinciya PandianNatalie G RegierElizabeth SloandCecília TomoriJennifer WenzelPublished in: Journal of nursing scholarship : an official publication of Sigma Theta Tau International Honor Society of Nursing (2023)
The novel coronavirus is unlikely to be the last pandemic in the U.S. and globally. To control COVID-19 and prevent unnecessary suffering and social and economic damage from future pandemics, the U.S. will need to improve its capacity to protect the public's health. Complex problems require multi-level solutions across critical domains. The COVID-19 pandemic has underscored four interrelated domains that reveal and compound deep underlying problems in the socioeconomic structure and health care system of the U.S. In so doing, however, the pandemic illuminates the way toward reforms that could improve our ability not only to cope with likely future epidemics but also to better serve the health care needs of the entire population. This article highlights the pressing need for multi-level individual, interpersonal, community, and public policy reforms to improve clinical care and public health outcomes in the current COVID-19 pandemic and future pandemics, and offers recommendations to achieve these aims.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- coronavirus disease
- sars cov
- mental health
- current status
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- public health
- oxidative stress
- gene expression
- health information
- quality improvement
- palliative care
- genome wide
- clinical practice
- risk assessment
- affordable care act
- climate change
- dna methylation
- chronic pain
- social media