COVID-19 was first identified in Wuhan City in December 2019 and spread throughout Hubei Province and other parts of China. After causing significant morbidity and mortality in China, by February 2020, it had spread to numerous other countries, infecting millions of people and causing a large number
Learning from COVID-19: GIS for Pandemics
β Scribed by Este Geraghty, Matt Artz
- Publisher
- Esri Press
- Year
- 2022
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 204
- Series
- Applying GIS, 8
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Now that the health community is in a state of reflection, how do we put the lessons learned into practice?
As we step back to examine the worldwide response to the COVID-19 pandemic, now is the time to think about how to raise the bar for our response to the next public health emergency. Now is the time to revisit health preparedness strategies and plans. And now is the time to review what the health community did that workedβand how we can do that again.
Learning from COVID-19: GIS for Pandemics tells real-life stories about how spatial thinking became invaluable in both local and full-scale outbreaks during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Needing to answer the question of βwhereβ sat at the forefront of everyoneβs mind, and using a geographic information system (GIS) for real-time surveillance transformed possibly overwhelming data into location intelligence that provided agencies and civic leaders with valuable insights.Β
Co-edited by Esri chief medical officer Dr. Este Geraghty, this book highlights best practices, key GIS capabilities, and lessons learned during the COVID-19 response that can help communities prepare for the next crisis. GIS has empowered:
- Organizations to use human mobility data to estimate the adherence to social distancing guidelines
- Communities to monitor their health care systemsβ capacity through spatially enabled surge tools
- Governments to use location-allocation methods to site new resources (i.e., testing sites and augmented care sites) in ways that account for at-risk and vulnerable populations
- Communities to use maps and spatial analysis to review case trends at local levels to support reopening of economies
- Organizations to think spatially as they consider βback-to-the-workplaceβ plans that account for physical distancing and employee safety needs
Learning from COVID-19 also includes a βnext stepsβ section that provides ideas, strategies, tools, and actions to help jump-start your own use of GIS, either as a citizen scientist or a health professional. A collection of online resources, including additional stories, videos, new ideas and concepts, and downloadable tools and content, complements this book.
Now is the time to use science and data to make informed decisions for our future, and this book shows us how we can do it.
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