Logo
Munich Personal RePEc Archive

Public health equity in information asymmetry: phenomenological studies upon SARS-CoV-2 super-virus mutation

Pachankis, Yang (2022): Public health equity in information asymmetry: phenomenological studies upon SARS-CoV-2 super-virus mutation. Forthcoming in: International Journal of Clinical and Medical Education Research , Vol. 2, No. 1 (2023)

Warning
There is a more recent version of this item available.
[thumbnail of MPRA_paper_115806.pdf]
Preview
PDF
MPRA_paper_115806.pdf

Download (207kB) | Preview

Abstract

In the context of SARS-CoV-2 crises, the phenomenological studies analyze the market phenomenon of People’s Republic of China (PRC) in public health. With PRC’s diplomatic behaviors around the national, international, and global public health crises, the phenomenological occurrence was further questioned into on accounts of genetic engineering, PRC’s top-down behaviors, and financial and non-financial incentives in public health inequality with its declared universal healthcare coverage. The phenomenological studies further the evidence chains on the PRC governmental bodies’ purposeful and intentional crimes against humanity, with the public health system they designed to hide criminal evidences in the clinical evidence chains. Albeit it is paramount for the medical professionals to prepare for a certain but unforeseeable surge of biomedical intrusion, the phenomenological studies call for military interventions on the humanitarian catastrophe that have twice in three years caused unnecessary sufferings regionally and globally. Without it, the world can only wait to detect Chinese passengers’ carriers instead of obtaining firsthand data, potentially leading to more deaths and mutation risks. Only peace-building and government reformation on democratic basis in the region can solve the humanitarian crisis once and for all.

Available Versions of this Item

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact us: mpra@ub.uni-muenchen.de

This repository has been built using EPrints software.

MPRA is a RePEc service hosted by Logo of the University Library LMU Munich.