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Research Article

Not the great equalizers: Covid-19, 1918–20 influenza, and the need for a paradigm shift in pandemic preparedness

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Read on this site (3)

Guido Alfani, Marco Bonetti & Mattia Fochesato. (2024) Pandemics and socio-economic status. Evidence from the plague of 1630 in northern Italy. Population Studies 78:1, pages 21-42.
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Hampton Gaddy & Mathias Mølbak Ingholt. (2023) Did the 1918 influenza pandemic cause a 1920 baby boom? Demographic evidence from neutral Europe. Population Studies 0:0, pages 1-19.
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Alice Reid. (2021) Why a long-term perspective is beneficial for demographers. Population Studies 75:sup1, pages 157-177.
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Articles from other publishers (13)

Arun Frey, Andrea M. Tilstra & Mark D. Verhagen. (2024) Inequalities in healthcare use during the COVID-19 pandemic. Nature Communications 15:1.
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Andres F. Castro Torres, Enrique Acosta, Ignacio Pardo, Nicolas Sacco & Beatriz Piedad Urdinola. (2023) Diverging reproductive outcomes by maternal education during the Covid‐19 pandemic across Brazilian and Colombian regions. Population, Space and Place 30:1.
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Jessica L. Dimka, Benjamin M. Schneider & Svenn-Erik Mamelund. (2023) Protocol for a systematic review to understand the long-term mental-health effects of influenza pandemics in the pre-COVID-19 era. Scandinavian Journal of Public Health.
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Martin Neugebauer, Alexander Patzina, Hans Dietrich & Malte Sandner. (2023) Two pandemic years greatly reduced young people’s life satisfaction: evidence from a comparison with pre-COVID-19 panel data. European Sociological Review.
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Jennifer Summers, Amanda Kvalsvig, Lucy Telfar Barnard, Julie Bennett, Matire Harwood, Nick Wilson & Michael G. Baker. (2023) Improvements and Persisting Challenges in COVID-19 Response Compared with 1918–19 Influenza Pandemic Response, New Zealand (Aotearoa). Emerging Infectious Diseases 29:9.
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Karl Gauffin, Olof Östergren & Agneta Cederström. (2023) Waves of inequality: income differences in intensive care due to Covid-19 in Sweden. European Journal of Public Health 33:4, pages 574-579.
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Jon Zelner, Ramya Naraharisetti & Sarah Zelner. (2023) Invited Commentary: To Make Long-Term Gains Against Infection Inequity, Infectious Disease Epidemiology Needs to Develop a More Sociological Imagination. American Journal of Epidemiology 192:7, pages 1047-1051.
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Heather T. Battles. (2022) Applying the polio model to New Zealand: The contingent role of socioeconomic status in infectious disease mortality. American Journal of Biological Anthropology 180:3, pages 561-572.
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Martin Neugebauer, Alexander Patzina, Hans W. Dietrich & Malte Sandner. (2023) Two Pandemic Years Greatly Reduced Young People's Life Satisfaction: Evidence from a Comparison with Pre-COVID-19 Panel Data. SSRN Electronic Journal.
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Sushma Dahal, Svenn-Erik Mamelund, Ruiyan Luo, Lisa Sattenspiel, Shannon Self-Brown & Gerardo Chowell. (2022) Investigating COVID-19 transmission and mortality differences between indigenous and non-indigenous populations in Mexico. International Journal of Infectious Diseases 122, pages 910-920.
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Muna Shifa, David Gordon, Murray Leibbrandt & Mary Zhang. (2022) Socioeconomic-Related Inequalities in COVID-19 Vulnerability in South Africa. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19:17, pages 10480.
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Daniele E. Alves, Svenn-Erik Mamelund, Jessica Dimka, Lone Simonsen, Mathias Mølbak, Søren Ørskov, Lisa Sattenspiel, Lianne Tripp, Andrew Noymer, Gerardo Chowell-Puente, Sushma Dahal, Taylor P. Van Doren, Amanda Wissler, Courtney Heffernan, Kirsty Renfree Short, Heather Battles & Michael G. Baker. (2022) Indigenous peoples and pandemics. Scandinavian Journal of Public Health 50:6, pages 662-667.
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Jessica Dimka, Taylor P. van Doren & Heather T. Battles. (2022) Pandemics, past and present: The role of biological anthropology in interdisciplinary pandemic studies. American Journal of Biological Anthropology 178:S74, pages 256-291.
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