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Avoiding the Banality of Evil in Times of COVID-19: Thinking Differently with a Biopsychosocial Perspective for Future Health and Social Policies Development.

Matilde LeonardiHaejung LeeSabina van der VeenThomas MariboMarie CuenotLiane SimonJaana PaltamaaSoraya MaartCarole TuckerYanina BesstrashnovaAlexander ShosminDaniel CidAnn-Helene AlmborgHeidi AnttilaShin YamadaLucilla FratturaCarlo ZavaroniQiu ZhuoyingAndrea MartinuzziMichela MartinuzziFrancesca Giulia MagnaniStefanus SnymanAhmed Amine El OumriNdegeya SylvainNatasha LaytonCatherine SykesPatricia Welch SaleebyAndrea Sylvia WinklerOlaf Kraus de Camargo
Published in: SN comprehensive clinical medicine (2020)
The COVID-19 pandemic provides the opportunity to re-think health policies and health systems approaches by the adoption of a biopsychosocial perspective, thus acting on environmental factors so as to increase facilitators and diminish barriers. Specifically, vulnerable people should not face discrimination because of their vulnerability in the allocation of care or life-sustaining treatments. Adoption of biopsychosocial model helps to identify key elements where to act to diminish effects of the pandemics. The pandemic showed us that barriers in health care organization affect mostly those that are vulnerable and can suffer discrimination not because of severity of diseases but just because of their vulnerability, be this age or disability and this can be avoided by biopsychosocial planning in health and social policies. It is possible to avoid the banality of evil, intended as lack of thinking on what we do when we do, by using the emergence of the emergency of COVID-19 as a Trojan horse to achieve some of the sustainable development goals such as universal health coverage and equity in access, thus acting on environmental factors is the key for global health improvement.
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