Socio-Economic Determinants of Coronavirus in the UK
Created: | 2022-03-29 10:20 |
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Institution: | Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences |
Editors' group: | Editors group for "Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences". |
Description: | Background
The transmission dynamics of infectious diseases are inevitably influenced by inequality, poverty and social determinants of health. Health disparities or inequalities will result in unequal burdens across a country’s population in terms of economic impact, morbidity and mortality. The coronavirus pandemic is no exception, arguably highlighting and perhaps widening decades of health inequalities. Intriguingly real-time monitoring, using for example public health data, of the evolving pandemic in the United Kingdom is revealing some apparent socio-economic anomalies that are counterintuitive. In particular, during certain epochs the most disadvantaged groups have the highest incidence of COVID-19, conversely at other times the highest incidence is reported by the more privileged groups. The precise mechanisms behind this switching of the highest case incidence between the least and most disadvantaged groups remains an open question. The synergy between infectious disease transmission and socio-economic determinants ideally should not only be accounted for by policy-makers but also by mathematical models which aim to inform policy decisions. This drives a need for the next generation of epidemiological models to reach beyond the traditional boundaries of contagion and mortality dynamics to include the socio-economic characteristics of the underlying population. This virtual event is guided by links with the JUNIPER Consortium and is delivered by the RAMP Continuity Network, the follow-on to the Royal Society’s Rapid Assistance in Modelling the Pandemic (RAMP) initiative. It will bring together modelling expertise from a diverse range of disciplines to support the pandemic modelling community already working on COVID-19. Aims and Objectives This one-day virtual workshop aims to facilitate communication between epidemiologists, social scientists, mathematical modellers and public health policy makers. It will do this by giving an overview of the emerging socio-economic patterns seen through the lens of the UK COVID-19 public health data, as well as discussing the socio-economic factors from both a public health and social science perspective. Participants will have the opportunity to raise questions following each presentation. There will also be a facilitated Q&A Discussion at the end of the day where individuals will have the opportunity to table further questions and share thinking. |
Website: | https://gateway.newton.ac.uk/event/tgm119 |
Media items
This collection contains 7 media items.
Media items
Welcome and introduction
18 views
Julia Gog (University of Cambridge)
05/04/2022
Programme: TGM119
SemId: 35305
Collection: Socio-Economic Determinants of Coronavirus in the UK
Institution: Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences
Created: Tue 12 Apr 2022
Talk 1 - Trends in COVID-19 School Absences by Measures of Deprivation
14 views
Trystan Leng (University of Warwick)
05/04/2022
Programme: TGM119
SemId: 35307
Collection: Socio-Economic Determinants of Coronavirus in the UK
Institution: Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences
Created: Tue 12 Apr 2022
Talk 2 - Explaining the spread of Omicron in Scotland through Deprivation, Geography and Demographics
11 views
Anthony Wood (University of Edinburgh)
05/04/2022
Programme: TGM119
SemId: 35308
Collection: Socio-Economic Determinants of Coronavirus in the UK
Institution: Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences
Created: Fri 8 Apr 2022
Talk 3 - Experience of Considering Health and Socioeconomic Harms of the Pandemic in Wales
22 views
Brendan Collins (Welsh Government)
05/04/2022
Programme: TGM119
SemId: 35310
Collection: Socio-Economic Determinants of Coronavirus in the UK
Institution: Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences
Created: Fri 8 Apr 2022
Talk 4 - Understanding Community Level Risk Factors Through Spatially Aggregated Covid-19 Risk Model
9 views
Kaveh Jahanshahi (Office for National Statistics)
05/04/2022
Programme: TGM119
SemId: 35311
Collection: Socio-Economic Determinants of Coronavirus in the UK
Institution: Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences
Created: Fri 8 Apr 2022
Talk 5 - Mathematical Modelling and Accounting for Social Determinants
16 views
Deirdre Hollingsworth (University of Oxford)
05/04/2022
Programme: TGM119
SemId: 35314
Collection: Socio-Economic Determinants of Coronavirus in the UK
Institution: Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences
Created: Fri 8 Apr 2022
Talk 7 - The Unequal Pandemic: COVID-19 and Health Inequalities
17 views
Clare Bambra (Newcastle University)
05/04/2022
Programme: TGM119
SemId: 35316
Collection: Socio-Economic Determinants of Coronavirus in the UK
Institution: Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences
Created: Fri 8 Apr 2022