Preventable: How a Pandemic Changed the World & How to Stop the Next One

Preventable: How a Pandemic Changed the World & How to Stop the Next One

  • Downloads:5982
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2022-05-30 06:53:02
  • Update Date:2025-09-06
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Devi Sridhar
  • ISBN:0241510546
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

The COVID-19 pandemic was not inevitable。 We could have stopped it, and we still can stop the next one。

Preventable is an important and illuminating book on how politics shape our health。 Drawing on the recent history of outbreaks, it examines the triggers behind global health crises and why we so often get our response to them wrong。 Comparing the spread of coronavirus in various parts of the world, Professor Devi Sridhar explores why countries such the US and the UK have-against expectations-suffered losses far worse than their poorer neighbours, and how the memory of other recent outbreaks led to very different outcomes in South Korea and West Africa。

Combining science, politics, ethics and economics, it is a dazzling dissection of the global structures that determine our fate, and the deep-seated economic and social inequalities at their heart。 Highlighting lessons learned from past and present, Sridhar sets out a vision for how we can better protect ourselves from the inevitable health crises to come。 It is an urgent book that will challenge, outrage and inspire。

Download

Reviews

Alison

I've strongly recommended this book to three people in the week since I have finished it - that's really high for any book, and especially so for dense non-fiction read I'm well aware won't appeal to most people。 It's also high for a book with a very big problem: which is that it was finished in August/September before Omicron hit, but published well after。 This has been addressed in a rather sad Afterward, but it does rather loom over the rest of the narrative。 Despite all this, I think this is I've strongly recommended this book to three people in the week since I have finished it - that's really high for any book, and especially so for dense non-fiction read I'm well aware won't appeal to most people。 It's also high for a book with a very big problem: which is that it was finished in August/September before Omicron hit, but published well after。 This has been addressed in a rather sad Afterward, but it does rather loom over the rest of the narrative。 Despite all this, I think this is a book anyone who wants to understand what the hell happened to the world in the last two years should start with。Refreshingly, Sridhar doesn't make this a polemical book。 She has views about what measures would have been best implemented at different times, but one of her main points is that we failed in allowing a reasoned discussion of differences。 She details the cost of both the spread of the virus and of lockdowns themselves。 This is most upsetting around school attendance - Sridhar covers the huge impact on girls' education globally, for example, with the estimate of 11 million girls who left education altogether and have not returned。The chapters are organised by geographically and chronologically。 The early content focuses on China, then Europe and East Asia, then the global spread。 Sridhar takes a deep dive into particular exemplars (Czechoslovakia, Senegal, Kerala are among the most interesting, but also NZ) to show how different responses had different results。 At each point, she details different points of view, conclusions and where evidence is debated。The narrative is clinical, but emotions occasionally peak through。 Sridhar is angry at Downing Street, covering meticulously how disastrous their early assumptions were。 She is deeply worried by China's government, whose early responses could have led to a very different global picture as she shows it。 She is disappointed in the absence of global cooperation - which could not only have mediated the impact on the most vulnerable but was also our main chance of actual eradication of the disease。 Much of the narrative is driven by the dynamics of a race - with our health services and governments trying to manage while medical researchers raced to perfect vaccines faster than the virus could mutate to bypass them。 She admits in the afterwards that ultimately, Omicron - a milder strain but one infectious enough to run rampant in a vaccination population - arrived before the world was vaccinated, ultimately ensuring we will be living with Covid for some time。 It is a defeated end - mediated yes, by the fact that our vaccinations have drastically lowered deaths, long term complications and health system impacts - but still one looking at terrible economic, social and health losses, and immense numbers of deaths。 She also warns that this will happen again - that our global society, and the destruction of natural habitats for animals, means repeated new infections。A friend, hearing a radio segment about the book which debated whether the title was true or whether "we are all ultimately virus food" asked me if I was pessimistic。 I realised I didn't know which is the pessimistic viewpoint - that this pandemic was preventable but our systems, structures and biases meant we couldn't prevent such a bad outcome, or the "virus food" one。 I think in the end, the latter is more comforting and the former more true。 Ultimately, Sridhar however is focused and concrete。 She suggests, for example, that we can't trust our nation-states to act outside of their own domestic political situations。 So she advocates strongly for building vaccine and research facilities in Africa and other regions currently without them。 Rather than a failed shared vaccine solution, she argues the capacity to produce and vaccinate their own populations must be stood up。 Modelling - which she regards as a major failure during the pandemic - must acknowledge that race and poverty are major indicators of health risk - not just health conditions (and that health workers are largely drawn from highly vulnerable populations)。 We need diversity in our leadership, and governments can't rely on mathematical models without advisory panels which embody that diversity。 And finally, the impacts of any measures are vastly different between elites and the rest。 If we don't face our problems square on, then we will indeed, be virus food。 。。。more

Ian

Very important book 。。 objective story of covid and different countries responses to it ! Very proscriptive re what we must do when the next pandemic comes, which it will ! She writes very well

Donna Holland

H do

Stuart

Prof Sridar has written an insightful, compelling narrative of the COVID-19 pandemic that is easy to read and understand。 She has provided lessons from past pandemics to help explain how we have gotten where we are, how the responses to dealing with the pandemic varied across the world, some got it right, others wrong。 An overview of the race for a vaccine and gives her ideas on what can be done moving forward。

JoJo

Strangely it seems I am alone in actually having read this book prior to making a review。 It puts some strong evidence for both sides of the argument on how covid was managed and is though-provoking。 For me the aim of a good book should be to ask you to think, so it works for me。

Sam

Interesting insight from a specialist into the way the c19 pandemic was handled in the UK

Linden

I'm sure this will be well worth reading when it is released hence the 5* rating。In the meantime ignore the troll reviewers that haven't read it。@goodreads - why are you allowing unverified reviews prior to publication? I'm sure this will be well worth reading when it is released hence the 5* rating。In the meantime ignore the troll reviewers that haven't read it。@goodreads - why are you allowing unverified reviews prior to publication? 。。。more

Nicola Whelan

Not read it as it’s not out yet but balancing out the trolls。

Vivek Pattan

Came here to balance the karma。 Here are 5 stars for an unread book to counter the trolls。Seriously goodreader should not be allowing reviews for unreleased books

Dick Long

Incredible that this book was finished before this zero covid advocate made a seismic U-turn on lockdowns and restrictions。 Few have spun, backpedaled and politicised the pandemic more for their own purposes than this author。 One to miss。

John Concannon

Like the other 'reviewers' I am yet to read this book, which won't be published until April, but I thought I might provide some balance by heaping some effusive praise: the best book I've never read。 Prof Sridar has (probably) written an insightful, compelling narrative of the COVID-19 pandemic。 She obviously has the training and expertise (unlike this book's reviewers) to be able to translate complex public health research and recommendations into language non-experts can understand。 Prof Srida Like the other 'reviewers' I am yet to read this book, which won't be published until April, but I thought I might provide some balance by heaping some effusive praise: the best book I've never read。 Prof Sridar has (probably) written an insightful, compelling narrative of the COVID-19 pandemic。 She obviously has the training and expertise (unlike this book's reviewers) to be able to translate complex public health research and recommendations into language non-experts can understand。 Prof Sridar has (I'm guessing) provided lessons from past pandemics to explain how we have gotten where we are, and what we can do about it moving forward。 Recommended - 5 stars。 。。。more

Victoria Rose

Another WEF grifter trying to profit from unscientific lockdown propaganda for their clout。 Does anyone really need to read this trash? Save your money。 These egotistical shills have lined their pockets enough by spouting their destructive nonsense incessantly for the last 18 months。 Let's not reward them further for it。 Another WEF grifter trying to profit from unscientific lockdown propaganda for their clout。 Does anyone really need to read this trash? Save your money。 These egotistical shills have lined their pockets enough by spouting their destructive nonsense incessantly for the last 18 months。 Let's not reward them further for it。 。。。more