4.5 Article

Multi-dimensional impacts of Coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic on Sustainable Development Goal achievement

Journal

GLOBALIZATION AND HEALTH
Volume 18, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12992-022-00861-1

Keywords

COVID-19; Sustainable Development Goals; SDGs; Causal loop diagram; Impact pathway

Funding

  1. National Research Council of Thailand (NRCT)

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This commentary analyzes the multidimensional impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on people, prosperity, planet, partnership, and peace, and provides policy recommendations. The pandemic directly affects health systems and well-being, while indirect consequences include impacts on prosperity, education, food security, and the environment. The magnitude of these impacts depends on prior vulnerability and inequity, as well as the effectiveness and timeliness of pandemic responses. To address the pandemic, equitable access to vaccines, widespread use of face masks and hand hygiene are crucial, and governments should focus on preparedness, resilient health systems, universal health coverage, and the Sustainable Development Goals.
Background: Health, social and economic crises triggered by the Coronavirus disease pandemic (COVID-19) can derail progress and achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals. This commentary analyses the complex nexus of multi-dimensional impacts of the pandemic on people, prosperity, planet, partnership and peace. From our analysis, we generate a causal loop diagram explaining these complex pathways and proposed policy recommendations. Main text: Health systems, health and wellbeing of people are directly affected by the pandemic, while impacts on prosperity, education, food security and environment are indirect consequences from pandemic containment, notably social measures, business and school closures and international travel restrictions. The magnitude of impacts is determined by the level of prior vulnerability and inequity in the society, and the effectiveness and timeliness of comprehensive pandemic responses. Conclusions: To exit the acute phase of the pandemic, equitable access to COVID-19 vaccines by all countries and continued high coverage of face masks and hand hygiene are critical entry points. During recovery, governments should strengthen preparedness based on the One Health approach, rebuild resilient health systems and an equitable society, ensure universal health coverage and social protection mechanisms for all. Governments should review progress and challenges from the pandemic and sustain a commitment to implementing the Sustainable Development Goals.

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