"Pandemics know no borders," but Responses to Pandemics Do: Global Health, COVID-19, and Latin America.
Marcos CuetoPublished in: Journal of the history of medicine and allied sciences (2024)
This article focuses on Brazil and Peru, the Latin American epicenter of the coronavirus pandemic during 2020 and 2021. The pandemic magnified the legacy of years of neoliberal policies, corruption and racism in these countries, the limitations of their poverty-reduction programs, the fragility of their democratic systems, and the insufficient political regard for public health and basic sanitation. I rely on the concepts of negligence and necropolitics. The first refers to the abdication of authorities in providing sufficient basic services to its citizens. The second - coined by Achille Mbembe before the pandemic - is used to explain the banalization by governments of preventable deaths of discriminated social groups. On a global level, the problematic access to medical equipment and vaccines was a failure because of the hoarding of vaccines by rich nations and the blaming of developing countries for their high mortality. The result was that national and international governmental reactions to COVID-19 worsened health asymmetries within countries and between the Global North and South.
Keyphrases
- public health
- sars cov
- global health
- coronavirus disease
- healthcare
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- mental health
- primary care
- cardiovascular events
- obsessive compulsive disorder
- risk factors
- drinking water
- type diabetes
- tertiary care
- risk assessment
- emergency department
- cardiovascular disease
- deep brain stimulation
- electronic health record