From 2019, a severe acute respiratory coronavirus 2, SARS-CoV-2, began to be a global pandemic. Many high income countries developed different strategies in response. This analysis intends to highlight how the COVID-19 became a global pandemic and the strategies that account for successes and failures. In identifying key policy differences, the high income countries of the United States, New Zealand and France were examined. The analysis found that New Zealand had proactive elimination strategies that proved highly effective, whereas the United States and France both struggled with mitigation factors that resulted in disproportionately higher confirmed cases and mortality rates. The analysis highlights how the airborne virus became a pandemic and then followed public policies’ effectiveness in terms of existing political institutions,and then their ability to be successful in preventing the spread of the virus.
Details
- Analysis and Comparisons of the COVID-19 Pandemic for Select High Income Countries
- Navas, Natalia (Author)
- Wilson, Natalia (Thesis director)
- Niebuhr, Robert (Committee member)
- Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
- Department of Psychology (Contributor)
- School of Politics and Global Studies (Contributor)