Human preparedness: Relational infrastructures and medical countermeasures in Sierra Leone

Publication date

2022-12

Authors

Lee, Shona J
Vernooij, EvaORCID 0000-0003-4745-116XISNI 000000050978008X
Enria, Luisa
Kelly, Ann H
Rogers, James
Ansumana, Rashid
Bangura, Mahmood H
Lees, Shelley
Street, Alice

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

This paper examines health worker experiences in two areas of post-epidemic preparedness in Sierra Leone - vaccine trials and laboratory strengthening - to reflect on the place of people in current models of epidemic response. Drawing on ethnographic research and interviews with health workers in the aftermath of Ebola, it explores the hopes and expectations that interventions foster for frontline workers in under-resourced health systems, and describes the unseen work involved in sustaining robust response infrastructures. Our analysis focuses on what it means for the people who sustain health systems in an emergency to be 'prepared' for an epidemic. Human preparedness entails more than the presence of a labour force; it involves building and maintaining 'relational infrastructures', often fragile social and moral relationships between health workers, publics, governments, and international organisations. The COVID-19 pandemic has underscored the value of rethinking human resources from an anthropological perspective, and investing in the safety and support of people at the forefront of response. In describing the labour, personal losses, and social risks undertaken by frontline workers for protocols and practicality to meet in an emergency context, we describe the social process of preparedness; that is, the contextual engineering and investment that make response systems work.

Keywords

Preparedness, epidemic response, Ebola, Sierra Leone, health worker, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Lee, S J, Vernooij, E, Enria, L, Kelly, A H, Rogers, J, Ansumana, R, Bangura, M H, Lees, S & Street, A 2022, 'Human preparedness : Relational infrastructures and medical countermeasures in Sierra Leone', Global Public Health, vol. 17, no. 12, pp. 4129-4145 . https://doi.org/10.1080/17441692.2022.2110917