# The COVID-19 quandemic

**Authors:** Olivier Rubin, Carina King, Johan von Schreeb, Claudia Morsut, Gyöngyi Kovács, Emmanuel Raju

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s12992-024-01024-0 · Globalization and Health · 2024-03-02

## TL;DR

The paper introduces the concept of a 'quandemic' to describe how over-reliance on a few metrics during the pandemic oversimplifies complex issues and affects policymaking.

## Contribution

The paper introduces the novel concept of a 'quandemic' to highlight the risks of over-reliance on quantifiable metrics in pandemic management.

## Key findings

- A limited set of metrics dominated pandemic discussions, crowding out other relevant evidence.
- Quandemic metrics favor certain outcomes while ignoring adverse effects like social isolation.
- Standardized metrics across countries led to competitive benchmarking dynamics.

## Abstract

The terms syndemic and infodemic have both been applied to the COVID-19 pandemic, and emphasize concurrent socio-cultural dynamics that are distinct from the epidemiological outbreak itself. We argue that the COVID-19 pandemic has exposed yet another important socio-political dynamic that can best be captured by the concept of a quandemic – a portmanteau of “quantification” and “pandemic”.

The use of quantifiable metrics in policymaking and evaluation has increased throughout the last decades, and is driven by a synergetic relationship between increases in supply and advances in demand for data. In most regards this is a welcome development. However, a quandemic, refers to a situation where a small subset of quantifiable metrics dominate policymaking and the public debate, at the expense of more nuanced and multi-disciplinary discourse. We therefore pose that a quandemic reduces a complex pandemic to a few metrics that present an overly simplified picture. During COVID-19, these metrics were different iterations of case numbers, deaths, hospitalizations, diagnostic tests, bed occupancy rates, the R-number and vaccination coverage. These limited metrics came to constitute the internationally recognized benchmarks for effective pandemic management.

Based on experience from the Nordic region, we propose four distinct dynamics that characterize a quandemic: 1) A limited number of metrics tend to dominate both political, expert, and public spheres and exhibit a great deal of rigidity over time. 2) These few metrics crowd-out other forms of evidence relevant to pandemic response. 3) The metrics tend to favour certain outcomes of pandemic management, such as reducing hospitalization rates, while not capturing potential adverse effects such as social isolation and loneliness. 4) Finally, the metrics are easily standardized across countries, and give rise to competitive dynamics based on international comparisons and benchmarking.

A quandemic is not inevitable. While metrics are an indispensable part of evidence-informed policymaking, being attentive to quandemic dynamics also means identifying relevant evidence that might not be captured by these few but dominant metrics. Pandemic responses need to account for and consider multilayered vulnerabilities and risks, including socioeconomic inequities and comorbidities.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** COVID-19 (MONDO:0100096)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** deaths (MESH:D003643), social isolation (MESH:C565377), COVID-19 (MESH:D000086382)

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10908106/full.md

## References

27 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10908106/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10908106