Beyond. Providing health systems which promote wellbeing ahead of a pandemic
Because of its violence, the Covid-19 pandemic severely tested the resilience of our European Healthcare systems which fell short of serving us effectively as we traversed the pandemic’s intensity.
First of all it directed our healthcare system almost exclusively toward the treatment of that pandemic.
Who would have believed that we could adapt our healthcare syste to sych an extent? The response to the saturation of intensive care beds illustrates that transition and the resilience in the system.
The occupation rate exceeded 200% in a number of French departments (Oise, Bas-Rhin, Haut-Rhin, and Vosges).
To deal with that, the government introduced a strategy to convert beds (those with a ventilator, particularly in recovery rooms and operating theatres) into intensive care beds.
Thus, in just a few weeks, our healthcare system went from 5,000 beds before the crsis to 14,500 intensive care beds during the crisis.
Could this accelerationof the change we saw taking place on an unprecedented scale and at an unprecedented rate in the context of the crisis come to an end at the same time as the pandemic? Probably not. This pandemic has also uncovered some much deeper questions.
- How will our behaviour in health matters evolve?
- How will our relationship with personal and collective freedoms evolve?
- How will time relationships change in the health field?
- How will our health policies evolve?