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Countries led by women coped better with COVID-19 pandemic

A 35-nation study found that countries headed by women leaders had six-fold fewer deaths from COVID-19 compared to those with male leadership.

A thought-provoking study by researchers at the Trinity College Dublin, University of Pretoria, European Environment Agency, University of York-UK, Australian National University, University College London, University of Iceland, eThekwini Municipality, University of Padova, University of Nottingham-UK, and Natural Capitalism Solutions Longmont in Colorado, suggests that countries headed by female leaders showed better outcomes over a variety of indicators.

News-Medical reports that one of the biggest challenges that faced health authorities in the early phase of the pandemic was flattening the curve, which means slowing the increase in the number of cases in a given period.

The logic was inescapable: the faster the number of cases shot up, the higher would be the peak, and the greater the risk of overloading the healthcare systems. This, in turn, would mean denial of adequate treatment to many patients with COVID-19 as well as other conditions. The outcomes would include more deaths, more significant restrictions held over longer periods of time, and more significant economic losses, which in turn increase the health threats.

Most countries resorted to lockdowns in various degrees, at various times, accompanied by various government interventions in terms of financial aid. The earlier the lockdown, in general, the more successful was the limitation of viral transmission. However, the biggest debate in many countries was whether dealing with the pandemic should take precedence over preserving economic growth.

In this context, it has already been reported that women in leadership had less hesitation in saying “Yes” to this question compared to male leaders.

The report says the international team of researchers took data on cases and deaths from the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), with respect to countries that supplied continuous data from 31 December, 2020, to 11 June, 2020. All included countries had high or upper-middle incomes, high human development index scores, and a democratic government.

These criteria ensure that the confounding effects of poverty, lack of democratic liberty, or lack of resources cannot be cited. Moreover, the democratic setup reduces the chances of a lack of transparency about data. However, China was included since it was the country where the outbreak first was reported.

The various indicators measured in the current study include the number of deaths, the number of days with reported deaths, the peak in daily deaths, deaths up to the first day of lockdown, and excess mortality in countries led by women as compared to men. The researchers also discuss some possible reasons for their findings.

The report says of the 35 countries, 10 were led by women either directly or indirectly appointed or elected. Some of the 10 were those with the most socially progressive standards as well. They found that countries headed by women leaders had six-fold fewer deaths from COVID-19 compared to those with male leadership.

The average number of deaths was about 2,000 and 13,000, respectively. When normalised data is used, women-led countries had 1.6-times fewer deaths per capita than the others. The peak in daily deaths was seven times lower in countries headed by women, but the per capita daily death rate was 1.5 times lower. The highest number of daily deaths was 91 on average, compared to 643 in male-led countries.

On average, there were 50 and 79 days with confirmed COVID-19 deaths in women and men-led countries. The flattening of the curve was more effective and rapid in the former than the latter, with a four-fold less steep slope.

The report says more proof of the speed and effectiveness of government response to the pandemic came in the form of average deaths over population at first day of national lockdown, which was 1.6 times higher in male-led countries. The mortality rate in excess of expected per capita was 4.8 vs. 21 in female and male-led countries. It is universally recognized that excess mortality is the least biased method of comparing COVID-19 deaths across countries. Moreover, all these parameters are interlinked.

As might have been expected, economic backwardness was correlated with COVID-19 deaths. All social measures were higher in female-led countries, including the Social Progress Index (SPI) of 88 vs 82 in female vs male-led countries. Among the three components, namely, Basic Human Needs, Foundations of Wellbeing, and Opportunity, the first was 95 vs 91, 88 vs 83 and 80 vs 71 in countries headed by women vs men, respectively.

The report says the Gini coefficient was also used to evaluate the relationship between female leadership, the economic backwardness, and how COVID-19 affected these factors. A higher Gini Index indicates greater inequality in income distribution. The researchers found that the Gini coefficient was 29 and 36 in female- and male-led countries, respectively.

The Gender Inequality Index (GII) deals with gender inequalities in reproductive health, empowerment, and economic status, measured by indicators like maternal mortality ratio and adolescent birth, adult educational status, and employment of adults. Higher values of the GII reflect higher gender disparities. The GII varied from 0.07 to 0.15 in countries headed by women and men, respectively.

The researchers next examined 25 countries with more economic equality, outside the sample, as a control, that is, with a lower-than-average Gini coefficient and GII. Here too, they found that countries led by women had a better profile, with fewer death-days, fewer deaths per population, and lower excess mortality per capita in female-led countries.

The countries with female leadership were also happier and more generous, with the global happiness score ranking being 21 and 32 in countries led by women and men, respectively, and the generosity ranking being 44 and 59 in countries with female and male leaders, respectively.

Comparing different policymaking approaches with the attitude of a strict parent and a nurturing one, the scientists feel that both of these attitudes are present and necessary in every modern society. However, in the current situation, the second might have been more successful.

According to the report, the researchers discuss the hesitancy on the part of the US, UK, Brazilian, and Singaporean male leaders, by way of illustration, to first admit the presence of the crisis, and to take timely and appropriate decisions. This led to unnecessary sickness and deaths. In contrast, they show how female leaders in Taiwan, Iceland, and New Zealand recognised the implications of the outbreak, listened to the experts, took quick and effective decisions, and therefore were able to relax the restrictions sooner or avoid lockdown altogether.

The important take-away from this paper emphasises two points. One, when women emerge into political leadership, the environment is likely to be more caring, egalitarian, less competitive and power-obsessed, and more progressive societies. And secondly, they say, “Implementing policies with short-term economic returns and long-term negative health and social impacts is more common in hierarchical, autocratic societies.”

Thus, unequal and hierarchical societies ignored human wellbeing in favour of economic growth, ending up with higher costs in all areas. On the other hand, even among more equal societies, countries led by women succeeded in dealing with the pandemic, as they have already achieved happier, more progressive, and greener societies.
This is important as the world is likely to face more pandemics, as pathogens adapt and spread over more extensive habitats as a result of climate change and ecological destruction.

Overall, the researchers comment: “These results point to female leadership as a marker for healthier and more equal societies, where policymaking prioritises long-term social wellbeing over short-term economic considerations.”

Abstract
Some countries have been more successful than others at dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic. When we explore the different policy approaches adopted as well as the underlying socio-economic factors, we note an interesting set of correlations: countries led by women leaders have fared significantly better than those led by men on a wide range of dimensions concerning the global health crisis. In this paper, we analyze available data for 35 countries, focusing on the following variables: number of deaths per capita due to COVID-19, number of days with reported deaths, peaks in daily deaths, deaths occurred on the first day of lockdown, and excess mortality. Results show that countries governed by female leaders experienced much fewer COVID-19 deaths per capita and were more effective and rapid at flattening the epidemic's curve, with lower peaks in daily deaths. We argue that there are both contingent and structural reasons that may explain these stark differences. First of all, most women-led governments were more prompt at introducing restrictive measures in the initial phase of the epidemic, prioritizing public health over economic concerns, and more successful at eliciting collaboration from the population. Secondly, most countries led by women are also those with a stronger focus on social equality, human needs and generosity. These societies are more receptive to political agendas that place social and environmental wellbeing at the core of national policymaking.

Authors
Luca Coscieme, Lorenzo Fioramonti, Lars F Mortensen, Kate E Pickett, Ida Kubiszewski, Hunter Lovins, Jacqueline McGlade, Kristin Vala Ragnarsdottir, Debra Roberts, Robert Constanza, Roberto De Vogli, Richard Wilkinson

 

[link url="https://www.news-medical.net/news/20200717/COVID-19-outcomes-better-in-countries-with-female-leaders.aspx"]Full News-Medical report[/link]

 

[link url="https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.07.13.20152397v2"]medRxiv abstract[/link]

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