When informal work and poor work conditions backfire and fuel the COVID-19 pandemic: Why we should listen to the lessons from Latin America.
Gabriela Spanghero LottaEllen KuhlmannPublished in: The International journal of health planning and management (2020)
Latin America is among the regions with the highest incidence of COVID-19 where the pandemic is creating a humanitarian crisis. In this Commentary we aim to reveal underlying problems of this crisis, that may be an underestimated global driver of the pandemic and a serious risk to health and healthcare systems. We set the focus on informal work and related poorly regulated sub-contracting which create poor work conditions as one dimension of the social determinants of health. We use the examples of Germany and Brazil, as opposite sides geographically and concerning the pandemic, to highlight a need for greater attention to these risks and for systematic inclusion in health systems resilience. In both countries, informal work may turn into hot spots of COVID-19, thus reinforcing social inequalities on a grand scale both nationally and globally. Our two contrasting country cases thus reveal a global threat that should be treated as such. There is much to learn for Europe and the world from Brazil and Latin America on what happens when informal labour and poor work environments backfire during the COVID-19 pandemic. We should listen carefully to these lessons.
Keyphrases
- coronavirus disease
- sars cov
- healthcare
- public health
- mental health
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- health information
- genome wide
- human health
- risk factors
- single cell
- climate change
- working memory
- transcription factor
- gene expression
- social support
- dna methylation
- newly diagnosed
- quantum dots
- fluorescent probe
- drug induced