PandemiX Centers forskningsprojekter

Centrets projekter

PandemiX Centret deltager i en r?kke forskningsprojekter, som er b?de internt og eksternt finansieret, ligesom centrets forskere deltager i projekter i samarbejde med andre forskningsinstitutioner i Danmark og udlandet. Blandt projekterne er:

The Great Leap. Multidisciplinary approaches to health inequalities, 1800-2022

To this day and age, deep-routed, structural inequalities in health have been one of the most consistent and pressing challenges society has faced. Recent events, such as the COVID19 pandemic highlight the urgent need for new research, insights and action to tackle this challenge for future generations. Embracing the COST Mission, the Great Leap takes a unique, multidisciplinary approach from a historical perspective to gain a greater understanding of the roots and drivers of health inequalities across regions and countries in Europe and beyond. 

PandemiX Pathology Collections Webpage

PandemiX Pathology Collections Webpage er et tv?rfagligt projekt, der har til form?l at skabe et centralt onlinekatalog, der viser sj?ldne og mangfoldige historiske patologipr?ver fra forskellige europ?iske institutioner. Ved at digitalisere og bevare disse uvurderlige samlinger s?ger dette projekt at fremh?ve deres enorme videnskabelige og historiske betydning og sikre, at den viden, de indeholder, ikke g?r tabt.

FUTUREDEMICS: Nordic Pandemic Preparedness Modelling Network

This scientific modelling hub will have the cross-disciplinary and cross-sectorial expertise and capacity to provide timely, relevant advice that aligns with policy priorities and demands when future pandemics and emergencies arise.

PID-scapes: Post-pandemic infectious disease landscapes: interactions across time and space

The PID-scapes project aims to study how infectious diseases affect another on a population level and how the pandemics of the late 19th and early 20th century affected the normal patterns in disease circulation. Overall, the aim is to gain a better understanding of what happens with the landscape of infectious diseases during and after a pandemic.

Social inequality, mortality and causes of death during the epidemiological transition in Copenhagen, 1861-1940

This project takes advantage of a set of newly digitized historical sources to address a central topic in social and economic history: how social standing affected the health and life expectancy of individuals living during the epidemiological transition. The epidemiological transition describes the shift in populations from high mortality due to infectious diseases to longer life expectancies with chronic non-communicable diseases becoming the primary causes of death.