Controlling the national borders and domestic boundaries may do little to stop disease spread, a position advanced early on in WHO guidelines for COVID-19. People of color also were at risk of more deeply experiencing the effects of the pandemic-related economic downturn, with existing inequalities becoming more pronounced as they navigated challenges such as job loss and unexpected expenses. The research has stressed the significance of discouraging human traffic connection, the essence and difficulties on ramping up testing, case identification and contact tracing for COVID-19 cases and conscious effort to flatten the curve to reduce the intensity and dynamics of the X and Y Axis complexes for achieving perfect New Normal and beyond that postmodernism and to Comtean positive stage. Education serves several functions for society. This work brings greater attention to the social and material interpenetration of 'risky' spaceshospitals, homes, the bush, the marketduring and outside of outbreak situation in order to go beyond narrow views of disease prevalence and individual behavior. These problems only underscore the need to further protect these very essential workers. The Hub reached out to Alexandre White, an assistant professor of sociology and history of medicine at Johns Hopkins University, to learn more about the societal repercussions and consequences of past pandemics. Taking a broader view, the anthropology of viral hemorrhagic fevers shows that social determinants of health shape hotspots. In your research, you study how social conditionsand social inequitiesinfluence health outcomes. In the midst of our current global health emergency, we have a measure of hope knowing that anthropologists have many insights to share about their work in previous outbreak settings. When sociology professor Nancy Riley realized last year that she would be teaching her popular social epidemiology class this fall semester and next spring semester, she redesigned her course to make the novel coronavirus a central component. The coronavirus: Sociology of a pandemic - Gulf Times However, in the absence of the pharmacological intervention, the practices of social distancing and quarantine initiatives might look similar to those of 1918. From early reports and comparisons with past health and economic crises, we can draw some tentative conclusions. The initial impact of COVID-19 on individuals who contract it can be serious. Image caption: With masks over their faces, members of the American Red Cross remove a victim of the Spanish flu from a house in Missouri. I'm hoping a similar trend might take hold after this, but in relation to public health and promoting new conversations about what we can do to prevent something similar from happening again by strengthening our public health system.