Loading Projects

« All Projects

👋 New here? This is one of many YSI projects happening around the world, all year round. All projects are hosted by members of the YSI community. They provide an opportunity to advance your knowledge, and build research collaborations around a pressing economic issue.

Virtual Project
  • This project has passed.

The Health Gap at the Time of COVID-19

FLE/YSI Webinar with Michael Marmot

Start time:

March 31, 2020 @ 3:00 pm - 4:30 pm

Virtual Project

EDT

Location:

Online

Type:

Other

Virtual Project
Random Event Image

Speakers

Speaker Image
Professor Sir Michael Marmot

Professor of Epidemiology at University College Londo

Speaker Image
Rob Johnson

President of INET

YSI Presenters

Description

In the last years, as inequality has risen, health disparities have also widened. Indeed, social and economic conditions lead to health inequities and the conditions in which people are born, grow, live, work and age represent social determinants of health. Inequities in power, money and resources are reflected in health inequalities.

During crisis like the COVID-19 one, our polarized economies and labour markets are revealing how these pre-existing social vulnerabilities can only get worse, deepening the gap between the haves and have-nots. Previous studies have shown how health crises, hitting entire segments of society, can set off cycles where poor economic status lead to higher levels of chronic diseases, further depressing productivity and raising health care costs, which in turn lead to more poverty and consequently to a rise in the severity of sicknesses. As lower ends of society are likelier to have a chronic health conditions, this implies that they are at higher risk of dying from coronavirus. Thus, socio- economic determinants of health conditions will not only make lower economic strata likelier to catch the disease, but also decrease their life expectancy, as chronical diseases represent important risk factors in mortality deriving from COVID-19. Moreover, there are some of the most vulnerable member of our society that cannot afford the consequences of lockdowns. There are workers that do not have sick paid leave and families reliant on hourly work might soon or even already be running out of money, and consequently being forced to look for

Hosted by Working Group(s):

Organizers

Attendees

Dom Jurkus

Matteo Ottaviani

Athullya Roytman

Bogdan Banjac

Chiara Benvenuto

Narine Harutyunyan

Nuoya Chen

Giulia Formici

Iva Parvanova

Ana De Menezes

Roberto Reale

Francisco Javier Ardila Suarez

Amalia Charlotte Pape

Jay Pocklington

Astrid Schott

Heske van Doornen

Heske van Doornen

Éva Kulik

Samuel Perry

Glen Gostlow

Pia Andres

Nouhaila Zaki

gaia salina

Sujay Simha Sairam

Dawit Haileyesus Denegetu

Asgeir B. Torfason

Imad Archid

chimuka matongo

Isaac Fatih Aydemir

Phuoc Pham

Étienne Desfossés

Maria Cecilia del Barrio Arleo

Ádám Kerényi

Luisa Scarcella

Fernando Hernández Pérez

Aman Saini

Giuseppe Orto

Nurlan Lalayev

Ender Ferreira

Stefano Merlo

Balázs Scher

Tünde Katalin Szántó

Aleksandar Stojanović

Claire Novak

Not the right project for you?

Take a look at the below.

They are open for applications.

250 Years of the Wealth of Nations: New Perspectives on Adam Smith’s Political Economy

University of Glasgow
Start: 16 Jun 2026
Deadline
08 Feb 2026
Learn More

Contours Of Conflict in Africa: Economics and the Contradictions of Liberation in Southern and Central Africa

University of the Free State, Centenary Complex
Start: 28 Oct 2026
Deadline
15 May 2026 00:00:59
Learn More

Be the first to know:

Subscribe to the YSI newsletter to find out when new projects go live.