Visualizing Vulnerability and Capturing the Pandemic's Human Toll

R. Wilson, M. Zellner, Ahoura Zandiatashbar
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Abstract

COVID-19 has created a crisis with little precedent. Illinoisans have lost family members. People have died in hospitals alone. But the human toll of the pandemic can be measured in more than lives lost. There have been other health effects, such as delayed surgery and lack of access to primary and behavioral healthcare. Many have lost jobs, which means lost health insurance, lost wages, and food insecurity. In Illinois, a half million people filed for unemployment in five weeks. For most people, the ability to shelter, clothe, feed, and care for ourselves and our families comes through productive work. Staying at home has created the potential for increased incidents of partner and child abuse. Sheltering in place has led to feelings of hopelessness and isolation. It has frayed emotions and relationships. The existential threat posed by COVID-19 is unlike anything most Americans have experienced—except, perhaps, those who lived through the Great Depression. The Institute of Government and Public Affairs (IGPA) launched a series of Pandemic Stress Indicators to measure and document the social and economic toll of the pandemic. For the first Pandemic Stress Indicator, IGPA collaborated with the University of Illinois Chicago’s Urban Data Visualization Lab to develop maps that visualize and identify compounding vulnerabilities, both to COVID-19 and to the socio-economic impact of the pandemic. Many Illinoisans face compounding vulnerabilities: to the virus itself and to the economic repercussions. Some came into the pandemic with hypertension, cardiovascular, and other health conditions that increase the risk for being a severe patient. Others struggled financially long before the pandemic. Persons of color and those living in poverty number among those hardest hit by the pandemic. Developing a wholistic understanding of the pandemic’s human toll and visualizing vulnerabilities of persons and communities is crucial to minimizing the pandemic’s total harm, while helping fragile persons and populations to emerge as unscathed as possible.
可视化脆弱性,捕捉疫情造成的人员伤亡
COVID-19造成了一场史无前例的危机。伊利诺斯州人失去了家人。仅在医院就有人死亡。但是,大流行造成的人员伤亡不仅仅是生命损失。还有其他健康影响,如延迟手术和缺乏获得初级和行为保健的机会。许多人失去了工作,这意味着失去了医疗保险、工资和粮食不安全。在伊利诺伊州,50万人在五周内申请失业。对大多数人来说,住所、衣服、食物、照顾自己和家人的能力来自于富有成效的工作。呆在家里可能会增加虐待伴侣和儿童的事件。就地避难导致了绝望和孤立的感觉。它磨损了情感和人际关系。COVID-19带来的生存威胁不同于大多数美国人经历过的任何事情——也许除了那些经历过大萧条的人。政府和公共事务研究所(IGPA)推出了一系列大流行病压力指标,以衡量和记录大流行病造成的社会和经济损失。对于第一个大流行压力指标,IGPA与伊利诺伊大学芝加哥分校的城市数据可视化实验室合作,开发了可视化和识别复合脆弱性的地图,包括COVID-19和大流行的社会经济影响。许多伊利诺伊州人面临着更复杂的脆弱性:病毒本身和经济影响。有些人在大流行时患有高血压、心血管疾病和其他健康状况,增加了成为重症患者的风险。其他国家在疫情爆发前很久就陷入了财务困境。有色人种和贫困人口是受疫情影响最严重的群体。全面了解大流行给人类造成的损失,直观地认识个人和社区的脆弱性,对于最大限度地减少大流行的总体危害,同时帮助脆弱的个人和群体尽可能毫发无损,至关重要。
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