India can build the boat as it sails rough Covid crisis waters, but should know where to go – ThePrint
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India is beginning to show early signs of Covid-19 response fatigue in the initial phase of lockdown 5.0 or Unlock 1.0.
It is quite evident that the public has been bombarded and desensitised (quiet unintentionally) to all Covid-related matters in the past few months. The media, too, appears to be moving on to other stories like the components and contours of the economic stimulus package, or Chinese incursions. Daily media briefings by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare have been discontinued, and the government appears to have been drifting from one lockdown to another, without defining the benchmarks of success for each phase or revealing a long-term plan.
The migrant crisis has been so mismanaged that it defies logic and common sense, and reflects a disdain for human lives at their most vulnerable. Even the economic stimulus package had no clear long-term vision.
The government seems to have lost focus, and appears to be leaving key decision-making to states and districts, but has not provided an all-encompassing governance framework to coordinate the response. Some decisions like runningshramiktrains and allowing domestic flights have been taken withoutconsulting statesorrelevant stakeholders,or before guidelines have been issued. There is seemingly no sense of solidarity among states, or a unifying vision.
We welcome themove to decentralisedecision-making, which is whatwe have advocated earlier, but we also need a game plan to coordinate the response nationally, and to come up with a long-term vision.
Covid-19 will test our tenacity, grit, resilience, and patience as a nation.India needs to carefully consider, plan and prepare for all possible scenarios that could arise out of the Covid-19 crisis.
Also read: Modi got all the credit for lockdown. Now, he wants states to share risk of unlocking India
Moving forward, weneed to visualise the Covid-19 response like athree-dimensional chess game, with health, economy, social, and political fronts being the multiple boards. Like in chess, we need to not only weigh the pros and cons of all the moves available to us, but also anticipate the opponents counter-move and plan the subsequent response. And, like in chess, there are three phases opening, middle-game and end-game.
The past five months from the first case to the successive lockdowns can be construed as the opening phase. We decreased the rate of spread and confined a majority of infections to a few districts. The middle-game, which will be longer, can be envisaged to last from now until an effective treatment or vaccine comes to the market. The end-game will begin with deployment of the treatment or vaccine nationally.
We need to begin the middle-game by clearly defining the broad objectives to achieve. The government does not seem to have clearly defined the objectives of the lockdown. Itsent a genericmessage thatthelockdown will defeatcoronavirus, which can be interpreted in myriad ways. Sometimes, it appeared as if theaim was to achieve zerocases, butthen it was changed to building healthcapacity.
With the increasing number of cases, migrants woes, and testing numbers still low, many have arguedthat the lockdown is a failure.
A few continue to present a totally positive spin on the lockdown,by selectively presenting cherry-pickeddata on how India is faring with respect to the rest of the world.
We,like others, feel the lockdown had elements of success like gaining time to build our health infrastructure, increase our testing capacity, focus on behaviour change and puttingresponse systems in place.
This divergence of opinion can be attributed to not communicating the aimsclearly beforehand, and metrics of evaluating success or failure.Therefore, we need to define the objective of the middle-game now.
Also read: First day of Unlock 1.0 Delhi shuts its border, street food vendors back in Chhattisgarh
Are we aiming for a draw (mitigation of the virus) or a win (suppression of the virus)?
Do we accept that a certain number of cases will occur for foreseeable future and we will focus on managing these and prevent the health system from collapsing?
If so, what is the tolerance limit for our health capacity, and is the capacity equitably distributed across our country? Or, do we aim to bring the number of daily cases to near zero?
If the latter, what is our contact-tracing strategy?Have we strengthened our surveillance systems and isolation capacity? Or, should it be a mix of both, and if so, what are the quantitative thresholds to move from one to another?
What are the economic and social objectives to aim for in the next phase?
We need to conduct a series of thought experiments by enumerating all scenarios that can play out, and the options available to address them. We need to ask questions on how different things can pan out.
Then, we need to use this to develop complex matrices of scenarios and agame plan for each one, with contingency plansat specific quantitative thresholds built in. We should communicate our options, approaches, and plans more openly and transparently. This will instil confidence in the public, boost their morale and help seek active participation.
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said: Any assessment can only commence after the lockdown is lifted fully; theres a lot of uncertainty.
Uncertainty by itself should not be an excuse not to plan, but more of a reason to have a well-thought-out network of plans. Unpredictability is more corrosive than uncertainty.This policy of having no policy reveals a fatalistic mindset, kills the confidence in response, and subdues the animal spirit. Having an elaborate plan, which is substantive and not superficial, conveys to the public that the government is proactive, ahead of the pandemic, and in control of the situation.
Also read: Sensex climbs to 3-month high on hopes that ease in lockdown will reboot economy
The next requirement is to maintain presence of mind when the best-laid plan goes awry the government must assess the situation, think on its feet and take corrective action so that the main plan is not affected.
Lockdown 1.0 set in motion the migrant crisis, but the government was unable to manage it, underestimating the size of crisis, discounting the desire of migrants to return home, disregarding their reasons, overestimating the risk of national spread, and misreading the political blowback.
The governments should be able to do rapid assessment after major decisions and take corrective actions.For instance, once theshramiktrains started, they should have monitored the situation on how many new cases are arising from train returnees. By not assessing these parameters, both the central and state governments leave room to blame one another and escape accountability.
When more relaxations are announced, like when malls openor when educational institutions are allowed to restart classes, the government should measure the mobility increase, social distancing adherence, and impact on the rate of increase in cases.The data stream should be more disaggregated and allow the government to estimate risk of each decision.This will aid in taking prompt remedial action based on data.
Also read: The night curfew in unlock 1.0 is outdated. Indians still think bad things happen in the dark
The government does not seem to trust the public, and wants to take decisions on peoples behalf (such as implying thatincreased testingwill create panic,suppressing ILIsurveillance data,misclassifying or not reportingdeaths). Community participation, what some call thesocial vaccine, is most critical since restrictions are being relaxed just when we have the highest daily cases, and people are keen to get back to a new normal as quickly as possible.
The public needs to be an active participant in the management of the middle-game. The government should seek support by having honest conversations about community transmission and laying down cards on the table in terms of allscenarios, risks involved, and options. It should create hope by showing potential paths out of the labyrinth.
The next phase has been termed as returning to a new normal and learning to live with the virus. If the government lays out all scenarios, proposed actions and reasons for those actions systematically, and gains public support for the same, that could be its defence against accusations that it is bringing in unnecessary reforms under the guise of pandemic response.
It will also compel the government to take action and not seek refugee under the umbrella of uncertainty.
Our middle-game, and how we chart it, will define what we can look forward to over the next few months and beyond a consolidated effort based on adequate planning, partnerships and precise data, or a continuation of status quo.
Given the novel nature of Covid, we may build the boat as we sail, but at least we should chart potential routes till the end-game begins.
Dr Manjunath Shankar is a public health specialist, health economist and disease modeller.He tweets at@MonJunNot.
Dr Anant Bhan is a researcher in global health, bioethics and health policy.He tweets at @AnantBhan.
Also read: Lockdown flattened the wrong curve GDP instead of Covid: Rajiv Bajaj tells Rahul Gandhi
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