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  • Undergraduate Student
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  • Director of Center
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© Research
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Published in BMJ Global Health - 22 Jun 2025

Warwick Anderson, Kari Lancaster, Sonja van Wichelen, Seye Abimbola, Rachel A Ankeny, Lukas Engelmann, Lyle Fearnley, Tamara Giles-Vernick, Benjamin Hegarty, Freya L Jephcott, Nicolo P Ludovice, Janet Roitman, Jacob Steere-Williams, Mark Stoove, John Noel Viaña, Catherine Waldby, Rachel Yang

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 40550575

Link to HAL – pasteur-05311326

Link to DOI – 10.1136/bmjgh-2024-018719

Preparedness strategies for emergent infectious diseases have focused on microbial surveillance, medical stockpiling and healthcare infrastructure resilience. But what does it mean to be epistemically or cognitively prepared for the next disease outbreak? Taking stock of lessons for data practices and statistical modelling in the wake of COVID-19, we propose a reconceptualising of preparedness in global health, focusing on ecological and sociological configurations or framings rather than resorting to reductive ‘crisis technologies’. We address three problem areas: data collection and sharing, outbreak modelling and the spatiotemporal structuring of analysis and intervention. We take these as illustrative of troubling effects of conceptual inflexibility. We inquire into alternative data practices and more complex epidemiological framings. This refiguring of our cognitive toolkit implies working through colonial legacies and national limitations embedded in governance of epidemiological reasoning. Epistemic preparedness—focusing on a more diverse, equitable and inclusive stocktaking as much as stockpiling—provides a reliable foundation for future disease outbreak management.