Advanced search Help
Resource Type or Special Collection is Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19)
Clear all search criteria
Only 2/3! You are seeing results from the Public Collection, not the complete Full Collection. Sign in to search everything (see eligibility).
-
Supporting a Nation in Crisis: Solutions for Local Leaders to Improve Mental Health and Well-Being During and Post-COVID-19
From the Introduction: "During the COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] pandemic, social isolation and loneliness caused by social distancing, coupled with overwhelming loss of life and widespread economic crisis, create a perfect storm for affecting Americans' mental health and well-being. We know from prior pandemics and natural disasters that COVID-19 and its implications have the potential to trigger or worsen anxiety, depression, addiction issues, suicide, and other mental health challenges. [...] This action guide is intended for local policymakers and civic institutions (e.g., anchor institutions such as universities, hospitals, and other enduring organizations that play a vital role in their local communities and economies; chambers of commerce; philanthropies; and multi-sector collaboratives). It provides recommendations that can be implemented to address mental health in both the immediate response and recovery phases of the pandemic. This guide also highlights a handful of focus populations uniquely affected by the mental health challenges of COVID-19 and suggests community-specific tactics to address these needs. While this does not represent an exhaustive list, the well-being of these groups has been fundamentally altered by the pandemic."
de Beaumont Foundation; Well Being Trust
Hare Bork, Rachel; Gendelman, Moriah
2020-08
-
Synergistic Interventions to Control COVID-19: Mass Testing and Isolation Mitigates Reliance on Distancing
From the Author Summary: "The global spread of SARS-CoV-2 [severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2] and the strategies used to manage it have come at significant societal costs. We analyze how mixed control strategies, which utilize interventions that prevent new infections from occurring (e.g., distancing or shut-downs) and others that actively search for and isolate existing infections (here, mass testing), can achieve improved public health outcomes while avoiding severe socio-economic burdens. Our results suggest that increasing testing capacity, including the number of tests available and the speed at which test results are provided, can reduce reliance on costly preventative interventions. Such reduction is possible with more isolation of active infections, including those without reported symptoms. However, failing to maintain preventative interventions without sufficient testing capacity can lead to large increases in infection burdens. By defining the combined effect of these interventions through mathematical models, this study provides insight into relaxation of distancing measures, and lays the groundwork for future public health economics analyses on the cost-effectiveness of combined management strategies."
Public Library of Science
Howerton, Emily; Ferrari, Matthew J.; Bjornstad, Ottar N. . . .
2021-10-28
-
Public Health Messaging in a Politicized Pandemic- 2020 Virtual Summit [video]
From the Video Description: "Communicating about COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] Response Measures in a Volatile Environment Effective messaging is essential in order to make the legal, policy, or fiscal changes demanded by this pandemic. COVID-19 is top of mind for citizens, public health, health care and local policy makers alike, but people with different political perspectives view COVID differently. In this challenging time, it's crucial that public health professionals be able to speak productively and meaningfully with people who hold different political perspectives and view complex health issues differently. This session will present research that shows the relationship between our political views and the foundational moral values with which we resonate. Though all of us confront numerous divides ranging from generational to political, the public health workforce can bridge these differences to become trusted messengers and further the health of their communities during this pandemic. This session is designed to benefit both frontline public health workers and organizational managers engaging in law, policy and/or fiscal change." The duration of the video is 1 hour, 4 minutes, and 44 seconds.
Network for Public Health Law
Matthews, Gene W.; Hunter, Dawn; Thomas, Elizabeth
2020-09-22
-
Impact of COVID-19 on the DPRK's Health System and Future Inter-Korean Biomedical Cluster Cooperation in the Post-Pandemic Era
From the Introduction: "In this essay, Sang Min Park discusses the impact of COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] and the international sanctions regime on the DPRK [The Democratic People's Republic of Korea] healthcare system, trends in global health aid for the DPRK and the role of the ROK [Republic of Korea], and a future inter-Korean Biomedical Cluster Cooperation model in a post-pandemic era, with implications for cooperative threat reduction (CTR+). [...] The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) is yet to confirm any official cases of COVID-19. Since the start of the pandemic in January 2020, the DPRK has taken extensive measures to control COVID-19, including imposing strict border controls, a 30-day quarantine for those with COVID-like symptoms, lockdowns of entire counties and cities, and a ban on travel between provinces. Several researchers have summarized the status of COVID-19 in the DPRK, its response to the pandemic, and the pandemic's impact on the economy and regional security of the DPRK. This paper will attempt to examine the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the DPRK health system as well as its future implications in three major ways: 1) a brief update of the DPRK's response to COVID-19 epidemic in 2021 and its impacts on the DPRK health system; 2) trends in global health aid to the DPRK during the international sanctions regime and the role of the Republic of Korea (ROK) in the COVID-19 pandemic era; and 3) how to build a sustainable and synergistic horizontal inter-Korean cooperation model in the post-pandemic era."
Nautilus Institute
Park, Sang Min
2021-11-08
-
Building Resilient, Equitable, and Healthy Communities Post Pandemic and Always: Recommendations for the Next Administration and 117th Congress
From the Document: "The nation's urban local health departments are critical to building a healthier, safer, and more secure nation. Metropolitan areas are now home to almost 84% of Americans, and BCHC [Big Cities Health Coalition] member health departments serve nearly 62 million or 1 in 5 Americans. At their best, these health departments positively impact entire populations and create an environment in which the healthy, safe option is the default option. [...] In the midst of a worldwide pandemic, it has never been more important to make public health decisions based on science and data. Elected leaders need to be transparent and refrain from undermining or politicizing science and data. Inconsistent messaging and a top-down approach have been harmful to the COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] response. All levels of government must work together to present a unified front to the American people."
Big Cities Health Coalition
2020-10-19
-
Bad Actors in News Reporting: Tracking News Manipulation by State Actors
From the Document: "The global spread of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) created fertile ground for attempts to influence and destabilize different populations and countries. In response to this, RAND Corporation researchers conducted a proof-of-concept study for detecting these efforts at scale. Marrying a large-scale collection pipeline for global news with machine-learning and data analysis workflows, the RAND team found that both Russia and China appear to have employed information manipulation during the COVID-19 pandemic in service to their respective global agendas. This report is the second in a series of two reports; the first (Matthews, Migacheva, and Brown, 2021) focused on qualitative and descriptive analysis of the same data referred to in this report. Here, we describe our analytic workflows for detecting and documenting state-sponsored malign and subversive information efforts, and we report quantitative results that support the qualitative findings from the first report. [...] As part of our analysis, we searched for both differences and similarities in the topics discussed by Russian, Chinese, and Western news media, and we found that conspiracy theories and geopolitical posturing were relatively common in Russian and Chinese news articles compared with Western (U.S. and UK) articles. The work we describe here lays the foundation for a robust protective capability that detects and sheds light on state-actor information manipulation and misconduct in the global arena."
RAND Corporation
Johnson, Christian; Marcellino, William M.
2021
-
MMWR Early Release: Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, November 5, 2021: The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices' Interim Recommendation for Use of Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 Vaccine in Children Aged 5-11 Years -- United States, November 2021
The Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) Series is prepared by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). [It] is the agency's primary vehicle for scientific publication of timely, reliable, authoritative, accurate, objective, and useful public health information and recommendations. This Early Release issue of MMWR contains the following article: "The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices' Interim Recommendation for Use of Pfizer-Biontech COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] Vaccine in Children Aged 5-11 Years -- United States, November 2021." Notifiable Diseases and Mortality Tables from MMWR can be accessed at the following link [http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/index2021.html]
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (U.S.)
2021-11-05
-
Modeling the Impact of Social Distancing and Targeted Vaccination on the Spread of COVID-19 Through a Real City-Scale Contact Network
From the Introduction: "[T]argeted vaccination strategies that prioritize high-contact individuals far outperform a baseline strategy of vaccinating people at random for reducing cases, even when the targeted strategy is only imperfectly implemented. In this work, we expand on that approach by performing a comparative study of the effectiveness of both social distancing and a vaccination strategy that targets those with the most physical contacts (such as workers in high-contact public-facing professions). This analysis is motivated by the fact that both mitigation strategies have significant challenges and high costs, so it is important to quantify their respective marginal benefits. Social distancing suppresses economic activity, has deleterious effects on child education, and leads to increased levels of depression and anxiety. Prioritizing the most high-contact individuals for vaccination has both direct challenges toward identifying those individuals and the opportunity costs of not prioritizing other vulnerable groups, and it could slow overall distribution. (We stress that the vaccination policy choice we are considering is not whether to prioritize vaccination, but whether to accept the costs associated with a targeted vaccination strategy.) In this study, we only attempt to quantify the effectiveness of these two COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] mitigation strategies for reducing the total number of cases; we do not model the number of hospitalizations or deaths, although these are also important factors for policy makers to consider. Nor do we consider other vaccination strategies, such as prioritizing the elderly, because our data source does not provide the necessary information to do so."
RAND Corporation
Hartnett, Gavin S.; Parker, Edward; Gulden, Timothy R. . . .
2021-06
-
Biological Research at the Department of Energy: Leveraging DOE's Unique Capabilities to Respond to the COVID-19 Pandemic, Hearing Before the Subcommittee on Energy of the Committee on Science, Space, and Technology, House of Representatives, One Hundred Sixteenth Congress, Second Session, September 11, 2020
This is the September 11, 2020 hearing on "Biological Research at the Department of Energy: Leveraging DOE's Unique Capabilities to Respond to the COVID-19 Pandemic," held before the U.S. House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology. From the opening statement of Lizzie Fletcher Webex: "This hearing will examine the historic reasons for why the Department possesses advanced bioscience capabilities to address the Nation's great challenges and to stimulate innovation, how this expertise and DOE's [Department of Energy's] biological research tools are being leveraged to respond to the COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] pandemic, and what future directions for the Department's biological system research can provide solutions for our Nation's most pressing issues." Statements, letters, and materials submitted for the record include those of the following: Mary Maxon, Debra Mohnen, Glenn C. Randall, and Kelly C. Wrighton.
United States. Government Publishing Office
2020
-
Deficiencies in Select Community Care Consult (Stat) Processes During the COVID-19 Pandemic
From the Executive Summary: "The VA [Department of Veterans Affairs] Office of the Inspector General (OIG) conducted a national review of select community care consults (stat community care consults) that were generated during a 103-day period at the outset of the COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] pandemic to evaluate consult processes. Patient involvement in care urgency disagreements and reporting of adverse events in community care were also reviewed. When the OIG identified deficiencies in processes, electronic health records (EHRs) of the patients at issue were further examined for potential negative outcomes. [...] In this report, the OIG addressed two components of the stat community care consult process-- the clinical aspect and the administrative aspect. To review the clinical aspect, the OIG evaluated whether care was rendered within 24 hours. For the administrative aspect, the OIG evaluated whether the status of stat community care consults was changed to complete within 24 hours. Facility processes were assessed through EHR reviews and survey responses."
United States. Department of Veterans Affairs. Office of Inspector General
2021-11-10
-
Resources for Effective COVID-19 Vaccine Communication
From the Document: "This toolkit focuses on engaging people who have been unable or have been hesitant to become fully vaccinated. Here are some ways you can determine who still needs the vaccine in your community. [...] Reach out to your 'public health department' to find out who still needs the vaccine in your community. Start with the vaccine coordinator within the health department and they will guide you to the information you need. Consider both who is not vaccinated in terms of raw numbers of people, and also, which communities are being vaccinated at a lower than average percentage. [...] As you begin to prioritize communities, work with trusted community leaders to check your data and assumptions. Ask for their thoughts about COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] and vaccination, explore what's keeping people from getting vaccinated understand what information and support they need and ask how you can help."
National League of Cities
2021-09
-
7 Ways to Boost Data Impact in Response to the Pandemic: Advice from the Nation's State Chief Data Officers
From the Document: "The COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] pandemic is affecting every state and illuminates the critical role data plays in their response efforts. The members of the State Chief Data Officers Network [hyperlink], which consists of 25 state Chief Data Officers [CDO] across the country, are stepping up to support their states' efforts to use data. Whether understanding supplies of personal protective equipment, which hospitals are nearing capacity, or reporting accurate testing data to the public, state CDOs are leaning in to improve how data are shared and used. Based on CDOs experiences to date, adopting effective practices in the COVID-19 response will help states move from crisis to recovery. Right now states are focused on sharing data about testing, infection rates in nursing homes and correctional facilities, and unemployment. In the future, state leaders will need the right data to inform the recovery phase and how to best reopen child care centers, economic sectors, and schools. [Included in this document are] best practices the State Chief Data Officers Network recommends to improve states' ability to share and use data during this crisis and through recovery."
Georgetown University. Beeck Center for Social Impact and Innovation
2020-04-30
-
Economic Costs and Benefits of Accelerated COVID-19 Vaccinations
From the Introduction: "Just as COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] produced a global economic shock, the COVID-19 vaccination programs are generally understood to be a prerequisite for a return to normalcy in our social and economic lives. Emergency measures to research, test, produce, and distribute vaccines have been expensive, but increases in GDP resulting from the vaccines are expected to exceed those costs by wide margins. Few studies have quantified the economic costs and benefits of different rates of COVID-19 vaccination, however. This Policy Brief focuses on developing such a quantitative assessment for the United States; the approach may be applied to other countries as well. Two illustrative scenarios support the conclusion that most plausible options to accelerate vaccinations would have economic benefits that far exceed their costs, in addition to their more important accomplishment of saving lives. This Policy Brief shows that if, for example, the United States had adopted a more aggressive policy in 2020 of unconditional contracts with vaccine producers, the up-front cost would have been higher but thousands of lives would have been saved and economic growth would have been stronger. Instead, the federal government conditioned its contracts on the vaccines' being proven safe and effective. The projections presented here show that even if unconditional contracts led to support for vaccines that failed the phase III trial and ultimately were not used, the cost would have been worth it. [...] We also examine a slower-than-baseline scenario, based on the pace of vaccinations that has occurred and is projected for the European Union."
Peterson Institute for International Economics
Gagnon, Joseph E.; Kamin, Steven, 1957-; Kearns, John
2021-05
-
Economic Policy for a Pandemic Age: How the World Must Prepare
From the Document: "This PIIE [Peterson Institute for International Economics] Briefing sets out some key lessons of the current response to COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019], along with policy recommendations to help prepare for the real possibility of a pandemic age. These innovations include multilateral projects as well as coordinated actions by individual countries, all making the world more resilient to a slow ebb of the current pandemic and to future pandemics. The Briefing covers 11 policy areas in which cooperative forward-looking policy action will materially improve our chances of truly escaping today's plague and making future plagues less costly."
Peterson Institute for International Economics
Bolle, Monica Baumgarten de; Obstfeld, Maurice; Posen, Adam Simon
2021-04
-
Financial Sector Return to Normal Operations Resource Guide
From the Introduction: "In response to immediate risks associated with the coronavirus diseases 2019 (COVID-19), financial services firms moved many worker members to remote work. Now firms continue to evaluate the risks and are developing plans to return workers to offices. There is no one-size-fits-all approach to returning worker members to offices, given the number of variables, which include, but are not limited to, differences in the types of business activities conducted by financial firms, state and local governments, community densities, COVID-19 infection rates (number of cases and deaths), access to healthcare facilities, availability of testing and vaccines, school closures, and public transportation availability. A phased approach may allow firms the ability to return worker to offices based on current levels of transmission as well as state and local government restrictions. This resource guide provides considerations for U.S. financial services firm's decision makers as they determine how to safely return worker to offices and other facilities. It includes resources for aligning to state and local restrictions and options to consider in making decisions about operational status while protecting the health and safety of workers, customers, and communities. While this resource guide is intended for U.S. financial firms, given the global impact of COVID-19 and the interdependency of supply chains, it may prove useful for firms with global operations."
Financial Services Sector Coordinating Council
2020-05-27
-
Navigating the World That COVID-19 Made: A Strategy for Revamping the Pandemic Research and Development Preparedness and Response Ecosystem
From the Introduction: "Over the past several decades, governments and international agencies commissioned dozens of scenarios, blue ribbon reports, and multiday tabletop exercises that revealed the potential toll and trajectory of a major epidemic and the glaring need for a robust capacity for vaccine research and development (R&D) and response. Despite these warnings, adequate upgrades were not made to most national and international structures, and the COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] pandemic revealed that a true, end-to-end R&D and response ecosystem--meaning, one that both produces and delivers needed vaccines to global populations in a rapid and equitable fashion--remains an elusive goal. The goals of this report are to: (1) identify the greatest opportunities and workable ideas for shortening the time to vaccine availability and (2) eliminate disparities in access in future pandemics by proposing ways to rework the architecture that supports the end-to-end vaccine R&D and response ecosystem. This report is comprised of 3 major sections. The first section defines what the pandemic vaccine R&D and response ecosystem is: a network of interacting actors and infrastructure involved in researching, developing, manufacturing, allocating, distributing, financing, and delivering vaccines against pandemic threats. It describes this ecosystem at the national and global levels and assesses its performance in the COVID-19 pandemic. The second section of this report identifies ways in which COVID-19 has changed government, industry, and institutional perceptions and priorities for the pandemic R&D and response ecosystem to confront to future threats. It considers the strategic implications of those changes for efforts to ensure the world is better prepared when the next pandemic threat emerges, as it inevitably will. The third section of this report assesses the major gaps and opportunities revealed along the value chain to the production of COVID-19 vaccines, including the sharing of genetic sequence data, viral specimens, and biological reference materials; prior research on platform technologies and pathogens with pandemic potential; establishment and scale up of manufacturing capacity; equitable distribution and access; and mobilization of financing and resources."
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Center for Health Security
Bollyky, Thomas J.; Nuzzo, Jennifer B.; Shearer, Matthew P. . . .
2021-10
-
COVID-19 Attracts Patriotic Troll Campaigns in Support of China's Geopolitical Interests
From the Document: "Over the past several weeks, a loosely coordinated pro-China trolling campaign on Twitter has: [1] Harassed Western media outlets [2] Impersonated Taiwanese users in an effort to undermine Taiwan's position with the World Health Organisation (WHO) [3] Spread false information about the COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] outbreak [4] Joined in pre-existing inauthentic social media campaigns. At this stage, there's no clear evidence of state direction behind this trolling campaign. However, the trolling campaign is having a significant political impact, including being publicly identified by Taiwan's Investigation Bureau as interfering in the already complex relationship between Taiwan and the WHO."
Australian Strategic Policy Institute
Thomas, Elise; Zhang, Albert
2020-04?
-
ID2020, Bill Gates and the Mark of the Beast: How COVID-19 Catalyses Existing Online Conspiracy Movements
From the Document: "Against the backdrop of the global Covid-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] pandemic, billionaire philanthropist Bill Gates has become the subject of a diverse and rapidly expanding universe of conspiracy theories. As an example, a recent poll found that 44% of Republicans and 19% of Democrats in the US now believe that Gates is linked to a plot to use vaccinations as a pretext to implant microchips into people. And it's not just America: 13% of Australians believe that Bill Gates played a role in the creation and spread of the coronavirus, and among young Australians it's 20%. Protests around the world, from Germany to Melbourne, have included anti-Gates chants and slogans."
Australian Strategic Policy Institute
Thomas, Elise; Zhang, Albert
2020-06-25
-
ASPI Presents: Covid-19 and Radicalisation [video]
From the Video Description: "ASPI's [Australian Strategic Policy Institute] Dr John Coyne, Head of Strategic Policing and Law Enforcement and Head of the North and Australia's Security, and Elise Thomas, researcher with ASPI's International Cyber Policy Centre, speak with Peta Lowe, Principal Consultant with Phronesis Consulting and Training Australia, about the potential impact of Covid-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] on far right wing extremism, recruitment and radicalisation." The duration of this video is 33 minutes and 47 seconds.
Australian Strategic Policy Institute
Coyne, John; Thomas, Elise; Lowe, Peta
2020-04-13
-
Covid-19 Disinformation and Social Media Manipulation: Automating Influence on Covid-19
From the Introduction: "ASPI ICPC [Australian Strategic Policy Institute International Cyber Policy Centre] has investigated a campaign of cross-platform inauthentic activity, conducted by Chinese-speaking actors and broadly in alignment with the political goal of the People's Republic of China (PRC) to denigrate the standing of the US. This appears to be targeted primarily at Western and US-based audiences by artificially boosting legitimate media and social media content in order to amplify divisive or negative narratives about the US. This has included highlighting racial tensions, amplifying criticisms of the US's handling of the coronavirus crisis, and political and personal scandals linked to President Donald Trump. However, there's no clear indication of a partisan lean in this campaign. President Trump appears to be criticised in his capacity as a leader of the US rather than as a presidential candidate. [...] This activity is valuable as a case study because it highlights the ways in which social media platforms provide a vector for small-scale actors to engage in covert political influence campaigns targeting citizens and voters in other nations in ways that can complement state-driven propaganda. The investigation offers insights into behavioural patterns that can reveal coordinated inauthentic activity designed to drive influence, even when it is disguised through selective sharing of authentic content by accounts with profiles that offer a veneer of legitimacy."
Australian Strategic Policy Institute
Thomas, Elise; Zhang, Albert; Wallis, Jake
2020-08
-
Covid-19 Disinformation and Social Media Manipulation: Viral Videos: Covid-19, China and Inauthentic Influence on Facebook
From the Introduction: "For the latest report in our series on Covid-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] disinformation, we've investigated ongoing inauthentic activity on Facebook and, to a lesser extent, YouTube. This activity uses both English- and Chinese -language content to present narratives that support the political objectives of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). These narratives span a range of topics, including assertions of corruption and incompetence in the Trump administration, the US Government's decision to ban TikTok, the George Floyd and Black Lives Matter protests, and the ongoing tensions in the US-China relationship. A major theme, and the focus of this report, is criticism of how the US broadly, and the Trump administration in particular, are handling the Covid-19 crisis on both the domestic and the global levels."
Australian Strategic Policy Institute
Thomas, Elise; Zhang, Albert; Wallis, Jake
2020-09
-
Covid-19 Disinformation and Social Media Manipulation: Pro-Russian Vaccine Politics Drives New Disinformation Narratives
From the Introduction: "On 17 July, a press release was posted to the websites of the Luhansk People's Republic, the pro-Russian self-declared state in Luhansk, Eastern Ukraine. The press release related to a supposed US Covid-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] vaccine trial that had been conducted on Ukrainian volunteers, including soldiers, in Kharkiv (which is controlled by the Ukrainian Government). According to the press release, of the 15 patients who received the trial vaccine, five were killed, including four Ukrainian soldiers. The press release was published the day after Russia announced plans to mass-produce its own vaccine in a matter of weeks. The Ukrainian vaccine trial never happened. However, this disinformation narrative--which has clear political, anti-American and anti-Ukrainian Government undertones--has achieved widespread dissemination in multiple languages and across multiple communities. [...] The success of this completely fictional narrative reflects a broader shift across the disinformation space. As the world's focus moves from the initial response to the coronavirus crisis towards the race to a vaccine, with all of the complex geopolitical interests that entails, political disinformation is also moving on from the origins of the virus to the vaccine race. This report uses the US-Ukrainian vaccine narrative as a case study to examine how political disinformation about Covid-19 vaccines is being laundered into the international information ecosystem."
Australian Strategic Policy Institute
Thomas, Elise; Zhang, Albert; Currey, Emilia
2020-08
-
Covid-19 Disinformation and Social Media Manipulation: Twisting the Truth: Ongoing Inauthentic Activity Promoting Falun Gong, the 'Epoch Times' and Truth Media Targets Australians on Facebook
From the Introduction: "This short investigation examines two suspicious Facebook pages that promote content supportive of Falun Gong and its associated media entities, including the 'Epoch Times' and New Tang Dynasty (NTD) media, yet don't declare any direct affiliation. Both pages display behaviours reminiscent of two networks previously removed from the platform, which Facebook attributed as linked to Truth Media and Epoch Media Group. One of the pages is run primarily by Australian-based moderators, while the other is run from Vietnam. These pages are using different strategies, including paid advertisements, systematically sharing content into Australian Facebook groups (including fringe and conspiracy groups), and attempting to drive traffic to 'Epoch Times' and Falun Gong-affiliated sites. Despite the different approaches, however, the pages are broadly aligned in their messaging and seek to influence Australians on a range of issues, including Australia's relationship with China, opinions of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), and the leadership of the Victorian state government."
Australian Strategic Policy Institute
Thomas, Elise
2020-09
-
Open Data for Economic Recovery
From the About This Guidebook: "This guidebook was compiled by staff of the State CDO [Chief Data Officer] Network at the Beeck Center for Social Impact + Innovation. We compiled these findings based on interviews with subject-matter experts and conversations with members of the State CDO Network. We used this research to identify data sets that states can and should publish to increase transparency and accountability and effectively respond to the COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] crisis. The key datasets in this report are coordinated with issues and use cases developed for the State CDO Network's previous report, Leveraging Data for Economic Recovery: A Roadmap for States [hyperlink]. Additionally, we conducted research on the legal and policy environment around open data in states, and the range of state-level decisions on the privacy of data related to COVID-19."
Georgetown University. Beeck Center for Social Impact and Innovation
Abazajian, Katya; Ward, Natalie; Crowley, Kell . . .
2021-06
-
Procuring Differently: How Colorado Used User Research and Active Vendor Management for COVID-19 Technology
From the Summary: "As part of an effective pandemic response, the State of Colorado needed a comprehensive digital solution for case investigation and contact tracing, which has been used by local public health agencies. In June 2020, the state implemented an innovative and entirely virtual vendor selection process to evaluate these solutions under the direction of the Colorado Digital Service (CDS), a team within the Governor's Office of Information Technology. 'Vendors were invited to provide a test environment where their solution could be assessed' based on functionality, user experience, and technical fit. Stakeholders across the state of Colorado participated directly in an interactive evaluation and selection process, which provided opportunities to assess vendors' work style and culture, center evaluation on user needs, and generate buy-in from users. A human-centered approach was essential to ensure widespread use of the solution and to provide robust data for state-level decision-making on its case-investigation and contact-tracing efforts. By requiring vendors to demonstrate value through 'demos not memos [hyperlink],' CDS was able to support the Colorado Department of Public Health and the Environment (CDPHE) in selecting the solution that enhanced CDPHE's ability to meet public health needs while still saving the state time and money. 'A vendor was selected in just 19 days and $15 million under budget.' Separate from this project, the State of Colorado has also enabled software for the public to receive exposure notifications [hyperlink]."
Georgetown University. Beeck Center for Social Impact and Innovation
Faust, Elaina; Martin, Reilly; Carroll, Conor . . .
2021-02
-
U.S. Equity-First Vaccination Initiative: Early Insights [2022]
From the Document: "The Equity-First Vaccination Initiative (EVI) aims to reduce racial disparities in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccination rates in the United States and, over the longer term, to strengthen the public health system to achieve more-equitable outcomes. To accomplish these goals, The Rockefeller Foundation has funded demonstration sites in Baltimore, Maryland; Chicago, Illinois; Houston, Texas; Newark, New Jersey; and Oakland, California, to plan and implement hyper-local, place-based strategies to increase vaccine confidence and access for communities that identify as Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC). This interim report introduces the initiative and the anchor partners in each of the five demonstration sites, highlights the initial work of selected community-based organizations to which the anchor partners are making subgrants, synthesizes lessons learned across the EVI in its first three months, and suggests policy implications for decisionmakers to consider as they seek to support hyper-local, community-driven efforts to reduce inequities in COVID-19 vaccination."
RAND Corporation
Faherty, Laura J.; Ringel, Jeanne S.; Williams, Malcolm V. . . .
2022
-
Project and Expenditure Report User Guide: State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds
From the Overview: "This document provides information on using Treasury's Portal to submit the required Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds (SLFRF) Project and Expenditure (P&E) reports. It is a supplement to the Compliance and Reporting Guidance (Reporting Guidance [hyperlink]), which contains relevant information and guidance on the reporting requirements. Additionally, you should visit Treasury's SLFRF home page [hyperlink] for the latest guidance and updates on programmatic and reporting topics, as well as information on Treasury's Interim Final Rule [hyperlink] (IFR). Each SLFRF recipient is required to submit periodic reports with current performance and financial information including background information about the SLFRF projects that are the subjects of the reports; and financial information with details about obligations, expenditures, direct payments, and subawards."
United States. Department of the Treasury
-
Executive Education Program: Federalism During a Global Pandemic [video]
From the Video Description: "During this webinar, John Yoo, Heller Professor of Law, University of California at Berkeley, explores the constitutional allowances/case precedents re: the roles and responsibilities of federal, state and local government in national emergencies like COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019]." The duration of this video is 49 minutes and 39 seconds.
Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.). Center for Homeland Defense and Security
Wilson, Dawn; Yoo, John
2020-04-03
-
Addressing Disaster Workforce Needs During the COVID-19 Pandemic
From the Abstract: "The COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] pandemic has triggered a broad range of challenges for frontline disaster workers in the United States. The scale of response necessary to manage the crisis, sometimes in tandem with other compounding forces, has triggered burnout and high rates of turnover in some settings. Drawing from research on frontline workers and other service providers in disaster settings, we identify strategies that can be used within organizations and by state and local decision-makers to address worker burnout, promote individual-level resilience, and mitigate the impacts of worker shortages over the short and long term as the crisis continues to evolve."
National Academies Press (U.S.)
Campbell, Nnenia; Sarpy, Sue Ann; Headley, Andrea M. . . .
2021-09
-
Missouri's Public Health Response to COVID-19: Key Findings and Recommendations for State Action and Investment
From the Executive Summary: "This report from the study, 'Strengthening Missouri's Capacity to Respond to Public Health Crises,' summarizes key findings that are relevant to strengthening the state's and local public health agencies' (LPHAs) capacity to respond to future public health crises. With funding from Missouri Foundation for Health, a George Washington University study team conducted 138 stakeholder interviews within public health and other sectors involved in the COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] response, revealing several key opportunities for the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services (DHSS). Missouri, like many other states, faced great challenges in responding to the COVID-19 pandemic. Missouri now has a singular opportunity to build stronger public health agencies at state and local levels with unprecedented amounts of funding from the federal government."
Milken Institute School of Public Health; Missouri Foundation for Health
Levi, Jeffrey, PhD
2021-09