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About:
Women in power: Female leadership and public health outcomes during the COVID-19 pandemic
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An Entity of Type :
schema:ScholarlyArticle
, within Data Space :
covidontheweb.inria.fr
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Type:
Academic Article
research paper
schema:ScholarlyArticle
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type
Academic Article
research paper
schema:ScholarlyArticle
isDefinedBy
Covid-on-the-Web dataset
has title
Women in power: Female leadership and public health outcomes during the COVID-19 pandemic
Creator
Pickett, Kate
Roberts, Debra
Coscieme, Luca
Costanza, Robert
De Vogli, Roberto
Fioramonti, Lorenzo
Kubiszewski, Ida
Lovins, Hunter
Mcglade, Jacqueline
Mortensen, Lars
Ragnarsdóttir,
Vala, Kristín
Wilkinson, Richard
Source
MedRxiv
abstract
Some countries have been more successful than others at dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic. When we explore the different policy approaches adopted as well as the underlying socio-economic factors, we note an interesting set of correlations: countries led by women leaders have fared significantly better than those led by men on a wide range of dimensions concerning the global health crisis. In this paper, we analyze available data for 35 countries, focusing on the following variables: number of deaths per capita due to COVID-19, number of days with reported deaths, peaks in daily deaths, deaths occurred on the first day of lockdown, and excess mortality. Results show that countries governed by female leaders experienced much fewer COVID-19 deaths per capita and were more effective and rapid at flattening the epidemic's curve, with lower peaks in daily deaths. We argue that there are both contingent and structural reasons that may explain these stark differences. First of all, most women-led governments were more prompt at introducing restrictive measures in the initial phase of the epidemic, prioritizing public health over economic concerns, and more successful at eliciting collaboration from the population. Secondly, most countries led by women are also those with a stronger focus on social equality, human needs and generosity. These societies are more receptive to political agendas that place social and environmental wellbeing at the core of national policymaking.
has issue date
2020-07-15
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bibo:doi
10.1101/2020.07.13.20152397
has license
medrxiv
sha1sum (hex)
793ac115ec70cf284086319b14f22b5f8299f41f
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https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.07.13.20152397
resource representing a document's title
Women in power: Female leadership and public health outcomes during the COVID-19 pandemic
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covid:793ac115ec70cf284086319b14f22b5f8299f41f#body_text
is
schema:about
of
named entity 'number'
named entity 'REPORTED'
named entity 'CURVE'
named entity 'DAY'
named entity 'POLICY APPROACHES'
named entity 'SOCIAL'
named entity 'COLLABORATION'
named entity 'GOVERNMENTS'
named entity 'WIDE'
named entity 'RAPID'
named entity 'THESE'
named entity 'DATA'
named entity 'PEAKS'
named entity 'environmental'
named entity 'collaboration'
named entity 'global health'
named entity 'public health'
named entity 'daily'
named entity 'reasons'
named entity 'capita'
named entity 'core'
named entity 'leaders'
named entity 'economic'
named entity 'global health'
named entity 'epidemic'
named entity 'COVID-19'
named entity 'COVID-19'
named entity 'COVID-19 pandemic'
named entity 'public health'
named entity 'CC-BY-ND'
named entity 'medRxiv'
named entity 'SARS'
named entity 'China'
named entity 'copyright holder'
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named entity 'doi'
named entity 'Tsai Ing-wen'
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named entity 'COVID'
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named entity 'selection criteria'
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named entity 'copyright holder'
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named entity 'IPCC'
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named entity 'HDI'
named entity 'COVID'
named entity '95% CI'
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named entity 'glass cliff'
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named entity 'national health'
named entity 'emergency measures'
named entity '95% CI'
named entity 'epidemic'
named entity 'social equality'
named entity '95% CI'
named entity 'economic growth'
named entity 'Sweden'
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