Autor/es reacciones

Rafael Cofiño

Associate Professor at the Andalusian School of Public Health.

I think this is an interesting study to provide more knowledge about proposals in the field of public health in terms of covid. It is interesting that a methodology with a Delphi study is published to highlight that there are other ways of looking at reality beyond the positivist-quantitative approach and that mixed methods can be used that combine qualitative and quantitative analyses, as in this case. 

But it is important to know that the Delphi approach, as is also the case with purely quantitative analyses, gives only a partial view of reality. For example, the consensus is the consensus of the group of 386 academics who participated. This is typical of purposive sampling in qualitative or mixed methodologies. On the one hand, this is powerful because it gathers information from key people at the global level, but, possibly, it has excluded other perspectives.  

It would have been good to take into account the profiles that have participated. Within public health, the profile has often been very epidemiological, more attached to infectious diseases than to social epidemiology and social sciences. In other words, it would be necessary to see whether the "public health" category has a good representation of the social sciences.  

In the case of our country's participation, I would like to insist that the pandemic has often been narrated from centralised territories (Madrid, Catalonia) and we have not listened much to the discourse of what has happened in other peripheral territories, where the pandemic has been very different in some respects.

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