| Literature DB >> 35151336 |
Guanglv Huang1, Xiaoli Yu1, Qinyi Long1, Liqin Huang1, Siyang Luo2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The absence of pharmaceutical interventions made it particularly difficult to mitigate the first outbreak of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). The current study investigated how economic freedom and equality influenced the pandemic control process.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19 pandemic control; Economic freedom; Equality
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35151336 PMCID: PMC8841047 DOI: 10.1186/s12992-022-00800-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Health ISSN: 1744-8603 Impact factor: 4.185
Fig. 1A) Correlation between nations’ economic freedom and the speed of pandemic control; B) RSA between the representation similarity matrix for nations’ economic freedom and that for the total controlling speed. The order of nations in the similarity matrix from top to bottom is Iraq, Iran, Ukraine, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Brazil, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Greece, Morocco, Russia, Qatar, Mexico, Nigeria, United Arab Emirates, Poland, Slovenia, Hungary, Malaysia, Sweden, Bulgaria, Peru, Slovakia, Chile, Japan, Romania, Finland, Estonia, Denmark, Ireland, Canada, United States, United Kingdom, Singapore, Egypt, China, Thailand, Turkey, Serbia, Lebanon, Uruguay, France, Italy, Belgium, Norway, Lithuania, Germany, Czechia, Iceland, Latvia, Netherlands, Spain, Croatia, Portugal, Israel, Austria, Australia, Switzerland, Luxembourg, South Korea and New Zealand. * p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; *** p < 0.01
Fig. 2A) Correlation between high/low egalitarian nations’ economic freedom and the speeds of pandemic control. B) Correlation between high/low equal nations’ economic freedom and the speeds of pandemic control
Fig. 3A) Correlation between states’ economic freedom with the speed of pandemic control; B) RSA between the representation similarity matrix for states’ economic freedom and that for the control speeds. C) Racial inequality moderates the correlation between states’ economic freedom and the speeds of pandemic control
Fig. 4The impact of economic freedom on the speed of pandemic control. In the box plot, the box center was the mean; the box edges represented the standard error of the mean; and the box whiskers displayed the 95% confidence interval of the mean. The interpretation of the subsequent box plots was similar
Fig. 5Comparisons of economic freedom, cooperation-led resources, risk aversion-led resources and loss aversion-led resources for different groups
Fig. 6Comparisons of cooperation-led resources between scenarios with different equalities and economic freedoms