Kevin Bardosh
University of Washington
66 Papers
53 Citations
Kevin Bardosh is an academic researcher from University of Washington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 50 publications. Previous affiliations of Kevin Bardosh include Emerging Pathogens Institute & University of Edinburgh.
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Papers
Community-Centered Responses to Ebola in Urban Liberia: The View from Below
Sharon Abramowitz,Kristen E. McLean,Sarah L. McKune,Kevin Bardosh,Mosoka Fallah,Josephine Monger,Kodjo Tehoungue,Patricia A. Omidian +7 more
TL;DR: Local communities’ strategies and recommendations give insight into how urban Liberian communities contained the EVD outbreak while navigating the systemic failures of the initial state and international response.
The unintended consequences of COVID-19 vaccine policy: why mandates, passports and restrictions may cause more harm than good
Kevin Bardosh,Alexandre de Figueiredo,Rachel Gur-Arie,Euzebiusz Jamrozik,J. Doidge,Trudo Lemmens,Salmaan Keshavjee,Janice E. Graham,Stefan Baral +8 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors argue that current mandatory vaccine policies are scientifically questionable and are likely to cause more societal harm than good, by restricting people's access to work, education, public transport and social life based on COVID-19 vaccination status.
One Health: past successes and future challenges in three African contexts.
TL;DR: The research found that while there is general enthusiasm and a strong affirmative argument for adoption of One Health approaches in Africa, identifying alternative contexts away from a narrow focus on pandemics will help broaden its appeal, particularly for national or regionally significant endemic and neglected diseases not usually addressed under a “global” remit.
A planetary vision for one health.
TL;DR: The extent to which human activities have degraded the earth’s ecosystems such that basic life support services have become threatened is outlined, which concludes that these planetary phenomena pose a serious and urgent threat to human health, well-being and sustainability.
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Controlling parasites, understanding practices: The biosocial complexity of a One Health intervention for neglected zoonotic helminths in northern Lao PDR
TL;DR: This research highlights the complexities of controlling T. solium and other soil-transmitted helminths in a remote ethnic minority village and the need to integrate biomedical and participatory approaches, and identifies several possible paradoxes and conundrums in embedding locally-grounded biosocial analysis into NTD programmes.
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