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    The power of poorer countries to influence global prepare... — Carmelics
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    Home/Bioethics
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    Supports→Global infectious disease preparedness and response systems are structurally unjust toward the poorest countries and people.

    The power of poorer countries to influence global preparedness and response does not match their outsized vulnerability to infectious disease.

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    Global infectious disease preparedness and response systems are structurally unj...The poorest countries and the poorest people are typically hit hardest during ou...

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    Global infectious disease preparedness and response systems are struct...85%The poorest countries and the poorest people are typically hit hardest...82%Global agreements and coordinated action on public health are unlikely...72%The resulting vaccines and treatments are priced beyond the reach of t...71%

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    Perhaps most foundationally, the self-interest reason for nations to engage globally in public health cannot be separated from questions of global structural injustice in international relations more broadly. Many threats to public health, including the threats from climate change, cannot be effectively addressed absent collective global action. However, in today’s global order in which nations differ greatly in wealth and other forms of power, the likelihood that agreements and coordinated acti

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