Publication | Open Access
Four pandemics: lessons learned, lessons lost
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2020
Year
World Health OrganizationPandemic ManagementCovid-19Social MediaSpanish FluHealth CommunicationPublic HealthHealth WorkforceGlobal Health CrisisCovid-19 PandemicDisease SurveillancePublic Health PolicyEpidemiologyNursingHealth SystemsEpidemic IntelligenceEmerging Infectious DiseasesGlobal HealthInternational HealthMedicineGlobal Health Epidemiology
In the past 100 years, the world has faced four distinctly different pandemics: the Spanish flu of 1918-1919, the SARS pandemic of 2003, the H1N1 or “swine flu” pandemic of 2012, and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Each public health crisis exposed specific systemic shortfalls and provided public health lessons for future events. The Spanish flu revealed a nursing shortage and led to a great appreciation of nursing as a profession. SARS showed the importance of having frontline clinicians be able to work with regulators and those producing guidelines. H1N1 raised questions about the nature of a global organization such as the World Health Organization in terms of the benefits and potential disadvantages of leading the fight against a long-term global public health threat. In the era of COVID-19, it seems apparent that we are learning about both the blessing and curse of social media.