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Adamecz Anna és Szabó-Morvai Ágnes cikke megjelent a World Medical & Health Policy szakfolyóiratban

 

 

Confidence in public institutions is critical
in containing the COVID-19 pandemic

 

World Medical & Health Policy
 
First published: 13 April 2023
 

Abstract

 

This paper investigates the relative importance of confidence in public institutions to explain cross-country differences in the severity of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. We find that a 1 SD increase (e.g., the actual difference between the United States and Finland) in confidence is associated with 56.3% fewer predicted deaths per million inhabitants. Confidence in public institutions is one of the most important predictors of deaths attributed to COVID-19, compared to country-level measures of health risks, the health system, demographics, economic and political development, and social capital. We show for the first time that confidence in public institutions encompasses more than just the unobserved quality of health or public services in general. If confidence only included the perceived quality, it would be associated with other health and social outcomes such as breast cancer recovery rates or imprisonment as well, but this is not the case. Moreover, our results indicate that fighting a pandemic requires citizens to cooperate with their governments, and willingness to cooperate relies on confidence in public institutions.



Key points

  • There is substantial heterogeneity in COVID-19 prevalence and deaths across countries.

  • We employ regression and machine learning methods to identify the most critical predictors of deaths attributed to the pandemic.

  • We find that confidence in public institutions is one of the most important predictors of deaths attributed to COVID-19.

  • Our results suggest that effective policy implementation during pandemics relies on confidence in public institutions.