ABSTRACT
THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC AS A GLOBAL STRESS TEST: LESSONS FOR FUTURE HEALTH EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
Dr. Pasham Uma*, Dr. R. L. Manisha, Korani Navyasree
The Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, caused by Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), constitutes the most severe global health emergency of the 21st century, resulting in over 770 million confirmed cases and more than 7 million reported deaths worldwide by 2024. Beyond its direct health impact, the pandemic triggered unprecedented socioeconomic disruption and exposed critical vulnerabilities in global health systems. This review synthesizes evidence-based lessons derived from multidisciplinary research spanning public health, clinical medicine, governance, and social sciences. A pronounced contrast emerged between the extraordinary scientific achievements—most notably the development of multiple safe and effective vaccines within 12 months, achieving efficacy rates exceeding 90% in early trials—and systemic failures in preparedness, governance, and equity. Chronically underfunded public health infrastructures, fragmented surveillance systems, and overreliance on static preparedness indices limited early response capacity. In parallel, fragmented and underpowered clinical trials delayed therapeutic consensus, while vaccine nationalism contributed to profound global inequities, with low-income countries receiving less than 20% vaccination coverage during the first year of vaccine rollout, facilitating the emergence of variants of concern. The pandemic also functioned as a social magnifier, disproportionately affecting marginalized populations and contributing to a documented 25–30% global increase in anxiety and depressive disorders. Additionally, an unprecedented “infodemic” of misinformation undermined public trust and reduced adherence to non-pharmaceutical interventions. Collectively, these findings underscore that pandemic resilience depends not only on biomedical innovation but also on sustained public health investment, equitable access to countermeasures, transparent governance, and effective risk communication. These lessons are critical for strengthening global preparedness against future pandemics.
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