在 COVID 时代:健康和医学学者与灾难研究相遇。

IF 0.9 3区 哲学 Q4 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Scott Gabriel Knowles
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章以 COVID-19 大流行初期以来出现的令人兴奋的灾难社会科学研究为基础。文章追踪了医学和公共卫生从业人员及其类似的社会科学人员处理该流行病的方式,明确考虑了他们寻求新概念来解释 COVID-19 及其全球进程所呈现的时间现象的方式。这篇文章重点介绍了在大流行的头两年作为 COVIDCalls 播客的一部分进行的一系列访谈。COVID 是一个学术交汇的契机,在 9.11 事件后和卡特里娜飓风后都曾错过,不应再次错过。因此,本文探讨了医学/健康研究与灾害研究似乎可以相互提供巨大帮助的主题,以了解我们的 COVID 时代:灾害的起源、灾害的结合以及灾害的终结。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
In COVID Times: Scholars of Health and Medicine Meet Disaster Studies.

This essay builds on the exciting trove of disaster social science research surfacing since the earliest days of the COVID-19 pandemic. It tracks the ways that both practitioners of medicine and public health, and their social science analogues, have approached the pandemic, explicitly considering the ways they reached for new concepts to explain the temporal phenomena presented by COVID-19 and its global course. The essay highlights a series of interviews conducted in the first two years of the pandemic as part of the COVIDCalls podcast. COVID is the moment for a scholarly convergence that was missed after September 11, and again after Hurricane Katrina, and should not be missed again. Accordingly, this essay explores themes where medicine/health studies and disaster studies seem to offer great help to one another in making sense of our COVID times: the origins of disaster, disasters in combination, and the end of a disaster.

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来源期刊
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 管理科学-科学史与科学哲学
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
40
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Started in 1946, the Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences is internationally recognized as one of the top publications in its field. The journal''s coverage is broad, publishing the latest original research on the written beginnings of medicine in all its aspects. When possible and appropriate, it focuses on what practitioners of the healing arts did or taught, and how their peers, as well as patients, received and interpreted their efforts. Subscribers include clinicians and hospital libraries, as well as academic and public historians.
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