As the Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has spread globally, with no effective treatment or vaccine yet available, governments in many countries have put in place social interventions to control the outbreak. The various lockdown measures may have devastating impacts on economies and livelihoods. This approach risks undermining public trust in government responses and therefore undermines efforts to promote behaviour change, which is key to the success of social interventions. Important lessons can be drawn from past Ebola outbreaks and the human immunodeficiency virus pandemic on how communities should be central to COVID-19 responses. Communities are complex and only their members can inform public health experts about their lived realities, the community’s understanding of the outbreak and what will work locally to reduce transmission. The public should be encouraged to take positive actions to ensure their own health and well-being, rather than made to feel powerless. Communities should be supported to develop their own response plans, community leaders should be recognised as vital assets, community representatives should have equal inclusion in strategic meetings and greater empathy should be built into decision-making processes.
【저자키워드】 COVID-19, coronavirus, empathy, Community engagement, outbreak, Community, Behaviour change, Non-pharmaceutical intervention, 【초록키워드】 Treatment, public health, Coronavirus disease 2019, Vaccine, pandemic, lockdown, risk, Intervention, Transmission, Spread, Health, response, Impact, Ebola, Human immunodeficiency virus, Government, complex, measure, effort, positive, Inclusion, responses, approach, country, effective, greater, develop, supported, promote, reduce, 【제목키워드】 Coronavirus disease 2019, Ebola, Human immunodeficiency virus, lesson,