Public Health Needs the Public Trust: A Pandemic Retrospective

The COVID crisis of the past three years has greatly impacted stakeholder relationships between scientists, health providers, policy makers, pharmaceutical industry employees, and the public. Lockdowns and restrictions of civil liberties strained an already fraught relationship between the public an...

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Main Authors: Matthew T. J. Halma, Joshua Guetzkow
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2023-05-01
Series:BioMed
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2673-8430/3/2/23
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author Matthew T. J. Halma
Joshua Guetzkow
author_facet Matthew T. J. Halma
Joshua Guetzkow
author_sort Matthew T. J. Halma
collection DOAJ
description The COVID crisis of the past three years has greatly impacted stakeholder relationships between scientists, health providers, policy makers, pharmaceutical industry employees, and the public. Lockdowns and restrictions of civil liberties strained an already fraught relationship between the public and policy makers, with scientists also seen as complicit in providing the justification for the abrogation of civil liberties. This was compounded by the suppression of open debate over contentious topics of public interest and a violation of core bioethical principles embodied in the Nuremberg Code. Overall, the policies chosen during the pandemic have had a corrosive impact on public trust, which is observable in surveys and consumer behaviour. While a loss of trust is difficult to remedy, the antidotes are accountability and transparency. This narrative review presents an overview of key issues that have motivated public distrust during the pandemic and ends with suggested remedies. Scientific norms and accountability must be restored in order to rebuild the vital relationship between scientists and the public they serve.
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spelling doaj.art-a557c740c6224b5fba35c083b286646f2023-11-18T09:24:15ZengMDPI AGBioMed2673-84302023-05-013225627110.3390/biomed3020023Public Health Needs the Public Trust: A Pandemic RetrospectiveMatthew T. J. Halma0Joshua Guetzkow1EbMC Squared CIC, Bath BA2 4BL, UKInstitute of Criminology, Department of Sociology & Anthropology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem 91905, IsraelThe COVID crisis of the past three years has greatly impacted stakeholder relationships between scientists, health providers, policy makers, pharmaceutical industry employees, and the public. Lockdowns and restrictions of civil liberties strained an already fraught relationship between the public and policy makers, with scientists also seen as complicit in providing the justification for the abrogation of civil liberties. This was compounded by the suppression of open debate over contentious topics of public interest and a violation of core bioethical principles embodied in the Nuremberg Code. Overall, the policies chosen during the pandemic have had a corrosive impact on public trust, which is observable in surveys and consumer behaviour. While a loss of trust is difficult to remedy, the antidotes are accountability and transparency. This narrative review presents an overview of key issues that have motivated public distrust during the pandemic and ends with suggested remedies. Scientific norms and accountability must be restored in order to rebuild the vital relationship between scientists and the public they serve.https://www.mdpi.com/2673-8430/3/2/23public healthpublic trustscience communicationpedagogycitizen sciencestakeholders
spellingShingle Matthew T. J. Halma
Joshua Guetzkow
Public Health Needs the Public Trust: A Pandemic Retrospective
BioMed
public health
public trust
science communication
pedagogy
citizen science
stakeholders
title Public Health Needs the Public Trust: A Pandemic Retrospective
title_full Public Health Needs the Public Trust: A Pandemic Retrospective
title_fullStr Public Health Needs the Public Trust: A Pandemic Retrospective
title_full_unstemmed Public Health Needs the Public Trust: A Pandemic Retrospective
title_short Public Health Needs the Public Trust: A Pandemic Retrospective
title_sort public health needs the public trust a pandemic retrospective
topic public health
public trust
science communication
pedagogy
citizen science
stakeholders
url https://www.mdpi.com/2673-8430/3/2/23
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