Socio-Economic Burden of Disease The COVID-19 Case
Materialtyp:
ArtikelUtgivningsinformation: MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2024Beskrivning: 1 electronic resource (196 p.)Innehållstyp: - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9783725802890
- 9783725802906
- Economics, Finance, Business and Management
- Business and Management
- Business communication and presentation
- COVID-19
- COVID-19 pandemic
- CSR
- GIS
- Gilford County
- North Carolina
- SARS-Cov-2
- artificial intelligence
- attitude
- attitudes
- college graduates
- coronavirus
- coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)
- cumulative prospect theory (CPT)
- data mining
- economic and psychological impacts
- economic development
- employment policy
- employment status
- epidemic stability
- evolution
- health
- health policies
- health system resilience
- healthcare decisions
- healthcare sector transformation
- implication
- knowledge
- lockdown
- long-term care facilities (LTCFs)
- machine learning
- migrants
- migrants' perception
- mitigation efficiency
- pandemic
- perception bias
- physical exercise
- policy evaluation
- practices
- public
- quantile regression
- quarantine hotel workers
- radiographers
- radiology and medical imaging
- regression
- remittances
- research and development
- safety protocols
- sample survey
- services value-added
- social and economic consequences
- social distancing
- stay-at-home order
- teleworking
- word-of-mouth
Open Access Unrestricted online access star
In 2020, the world was shaken by a very unexpected development, an unseen virus which could kill millions and spread without control. To reduce the impact of the pandemic and before the vaccine was created, lockdown and other safety measures were implemented. In this context, the socio-economic burden of the disease was, in our opinion, a major issue because we always considered that COVID-19 would have a hard impact on human beings and that that impact would be the most prominent effect of the pandemic. In consequence, when designing this Special Issue, we hoped to receive papers with "tales from the field" that would describe the mentioned socio-economic burden. Therefore, it was deeply rewarding to receive so many contributions of very good quality that ended up composing the Special Issue that is reprinted here. We sincerely thank all the authors and reviewers for the work they produced and we congratulate them for their success. We believe that this reprint of the Special Issue contributes to the understanding of the major consequences of COVID-19 in society. Crucially, the reprint includes papers on global perspectives but also national cases and also sector-specific cases. Finally, we hope the legacy of this volume will be long-lasting and that the papers it contains will be quoted and cited for many years to come.
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eng
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