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Review
. 2021 Jan;16(1):17-35.
doi: 10.1080/17441692.2020.1828982. Epub 2020 Oct 6.

Sociocultural, behavioural and political factors shaping the COVID-19 pandemic: the need for a biocultural approach to understanding pandemics and (re)emerging pathogens

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Free article
Review

Sociocultural, behavioural and political factors shaping the COVID-19 pandemic: the need for a biocultural approach to understanding pandemics and (re)emerging pathogens

Anna Friedler. Glob Public Health. 2021 Jan.
Free article

Erratum in

  • Correction.
    [No authors listed] [No authors listed] Glob Public Health. 2021 Jan;16(1):i. doi: 10.1080/17441692.2021.1868901. Epub 2020 Dec 24. Glob Public Health. 2021. PMID: 33357012 No abstract available.

Abstract

Although there has been increasing focus in recent years on interdisciplinary approaches to health and disease, and in particular the dimension of social inequalities in epidemics, infectious diseases have been much less focused on. This is especially true in the area of cultural dynamics and their effects on pathogen behaviours, although there is evidence to suggest that this relationship is central to shaping our interactions with infectious disease agents on a variety of levels. This paper makes a case for a biocultural approach to pandemics such as COVID-19. It then uses this biocultural framework to examine the anthropogenic dynamics that influenced and continue to shape the COVID-19 pandemic, both during its initial phase and during critical intersections of the pandemic. Through this understanding of biocultural interactions between people, animals and pathogens, a broader societal and political dimension is drawn as a function of population level and international cultures, to reflect on the culturally mediated differential burden of the pandemic. Ultimately, it is argued that a biocultural perspective on infectious disease pandemics will allow for critical reflection on how culture shapes our behaviours at all levels, and how the effects of these behaviours are ultimately foundational to pathogen ecology and evolution.

Keywords: Biocultural; COVID-19; biopolitics; cultural epidemiology; infectious disease.

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