Sociology of COVID-19
Terms are Political
-
Use terms "COVID-19" (the disease) or "coronavirus" as precisely as possible, not as the "Chinese virus"
-
Use "specimen-tested" (for now? as a description), instead of "cases" to emphasize current info based on lab tests (problems: lack of broader testing, individual with multiple tests, failed tests due to lab errors, and so on)
-
Use "safer distance," instead of "social distance" (need to convey stronger socio-political connections in these times)
-
Problematic epidemiological terms that need more appropriate phrasing (for the general-public):
- "Self-quarantine," "quarantine," "isolation," and "shelter-in-place"
- "Super-spreader"
- "Community spread"
- "Index patient" (and related term "patient zero") and "index case"
- "Infections"
Problems with Social Epidemiology
- Political (WHO, national gov'ts, etc)
- Changing definition of the symptoms (varying national def.) 

- Uneven guidelines for public safety
- Face masks or not

- Gloves or not 

- Physical distancing (varying national def.) 

- National and regional "clusters" and "epicenters"
Enablers of the Pandemic: Economic & Political
- Neoliberal Policies: Economic
- Privatization and deregulation of hospital and health facilities

- Anarchy of production and distribution from masks and ventilators to food items
- Defense Production Act (targeted GM) 

- Big Pharma (private test kits and vaccine development) 

- Neoliberal Policies: Political
- Decentralized government responses (FEMA) 

- Militarization
- US National Guard

- State control, surveillance and criminalization
- Phone data tracking

- EPA: Reduce enforcement of environmental protection (question of water quality)

- Economic and political sanctions 

- International Agencies (WHO, UN, and so on)

- Misc
- China, HK, and Taiwan 

- South Korea

- ±õ°ù²¹²Ô

- Italy and Spain

- African countries

- Latin America and Caribbean countries 

- Other countries and territories 

Impacts: Social & Economic
- Impacts on health workers and professions
- Homecare facilities 

- Impacts of US workers and the poor
- Enforcement and practice of "shelter-in-place"

- Seafarers and cruise ship workers 

- Mass layoffs (Macy's, Kohl's, Gap)
- Impacts of the US middle-class 

- Impacts of racial-ethnic and migrant communities
- Uncertainity for agricultural and food processing migrant workers
- Anti-Asian violence and hysteria
- Detention centers 

- Racial-targeted enforcement 

- Celebreties and politicians
- Initial testing
- Impacts of cities and rural areas (in the US)
- NYC metro region 

- Shifting migration patterns

- Prisons and detention centers

- Early release
- Question of safer distancing
- Physical and tech-mediated interactions
- At work

- Family and households
- Health &wellness issues incl. emotional wellbeing 

- While shopping and consuming 

- Education and schooling 

- Organizing and protests 

Public & Social Media Protests
- Nurses and hospital staff & workers (US)

- Instacart, Amazon, and McDonald's Rest. workers strikes (US)

- Prisoners protests
- Support for cruise ship workers such as the Grand Princess cruise ship (US)

- Sanctions Kills campaign (international)

- Malaya campaign against Duterte's failures (Philippines)

In Context
- 1918 flu pandemic
- World War One and US government misinformation campaign
- Use of terms

- Public "safety" campaign 

- Two "waves" (spring and fall) in the US

- World War One and US government misinformation campaign
- 1980s AIDS pandemic
- Use of terms

- Big. Pharma interests

- Discrimination and scapegoating 

- ±Ê°ù´Ç³Ù±ð²õ³Ù²õ

- SARS and "MERS" epidemics