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Stay home, stay safe? Public health assumptions about how we live with COVID.

Cris TownleyCoralie ProperjohnRebekah GraceTom McClean
Published in: Health sociology review : the journal of the Health Section of the Australian Sociological Association (2023)
The COVID pandemic has had an uneven impact on families and communities, exacerbating existing structural disadvantage. We demonstrate that the construction of the pandemic by policymakers as primarily a medical problem has shaped the public health response in such a way as to hide the resulting lack of access to necessities for many and deterioration in people's wellbeing. We interviewed social welfare service providers in an urban area of high cultural and linguistic diversity and low socioeconomic advantage, about their experiences in the 2021 lockdown period. Our findings highlight the unanticipated impacts of the public health response on people who cannot be recognised in the normative subjects constructed by policy. We bring to the fore the hidden experiences behind the government-reported COVID health statistics and explore the (dis)integration of services that support survival. To avoid worsening structural disadvantage, policy responses to crisis require conceptualising the problem and its solutions from diverse standpoints, built on an understanding of the different elements that shape who we are and the way we live.
Keyphrases
  • public health
  • coronavirus disease
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • sars cov
  • global health
  • respiratory syndrome coronavirus
  • primary care
  • wastewater treatment
  • social media
  • risk assessment
  • health information