COVID-19

With everything in short supply — hospital beds, ICU beds, medicines, vaccines and even crematoriums and burial sites — desperate patients and citizen groups who were getting no help from the state appealed to the courts hoping they could force the government to get its act together. The Supreme Court and some High Courts also took suo moto notice of the situation and passed orders stressing upon governments’ responsibilities and actions to be taken. One significant, if controversial, step taken early by the Supreme Court was to take cognizance of issues on COVID-19 pending before six High Courts, Delhi, Bombay,…

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The Sunday gone by, 13th June, was the last Sunday in Mumbai before the restrictions of the past couple of months were lifted. In residential townships, away from the bustling markets, people have been going about their essential purchases in a relatively controlled manner. As lockdown eases, people are moving around more freely. With the monsoon already in, roadside vendors and small businesses are bouncing back, eager to make a living on every sunny day. Children want to meet their friends. We want to go out to the parks, to the shops, back to the office. Standing on the balcony…

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“But if thought corrupts language, language can also corrupt thought.”― George Orwell, 1984 How do we use language to shape and control thoughts? How do we use language for behaviour change? How do we use language for affirmative action? How do we use language to respect the person as a whole rather than as a trait,  a diagnosis or a condition?  In the early days, before the World Health Organisation (WHO) declared COVID-19 as a pandemic, one term that repeatedly made the rounds was 'social distancing'.  Benign as it sounds, to behave responsibly by maintaining a certain physical distance from the…

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“There is no blanket figure given as daily COVID testing target,” says Rajendra Cholan, Special Commissioner (Health) at BBMP. “Testing numbers are decided based on a formula given by the state TAC (Technical Advisory Committee) for COVID”. Even as the second wave hit its peak during April-May, Bengaluru urban clocked only around 30,000-40,000 tests per day, (it was 20,000-30,000 before the start of the second wave), despite experts recommending an increase in test numbers which perhaps could have identified and isolated asymptomatic persons quicker and reduced the spread. Cholan added that it was not a question of randomly testing one…

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Thirty-year-old Raghu Kamble has been working as a garbage picker for high rises in Chembur, Tilak Nagar and surrounding areas for three years now. For him, every morning is the same. He routinely visits the  residential buildings at 9 AM — accompanied by nothing but a flimsy surgical mask for protection from the deadly virus looming over Mumbai city.  According to statistics released by Bhartiya Mazdoor Sangh, over 6,500 contract workers in sanitation have been working throughout the pandemic without safety gear like Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) or hazard pay. By mid-May, Maharashtra had seen no less than 30,000 new…

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In the last week of May, a 42-year-old male reached out to mental health experts at BMC's helpline for help. He was sorrowful and was feeling demoralised, he said. “He said that for two-three days he has been hearing news about his neighbours and extended families either falling sick or dying due to the coronavirus," said, Dr. Shubhangi Parkar, a city-based psychiatrist and a former head of the psychiatry department, KEM Hospital. "With all the negativity around, he had completely lost hope in life,” she added. Representational Image (Pic: Canva) Many citizens who are undergoing mental health issues due to…

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In mid-May, R Shanthi, a resident of CIT Nagar, tested positive for COVID-19 and isolated herself at home. In her 50s, Shanthi had mild symptoms that included fever and cough. It was a time of great anxiety and stress, but what kept her reassured to an extent were the phone calls that she received every second day, from the doctor deputed at Chennai Corporation’s zonal telemedicine department. Telemedicine has indeed been a boon for many patients like Shanthi battling the virus at home. Ever since the pandemic took centre stage, access to medical consultation for both COVID and non-COVID patients…

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Vandhaarai Vaazhavaikum Thamizhagam ( Tamil Nadu is a land that provides livelihood to those who arrive here) has been an old adage about the state. A state welcoming migrants from all over the country and the world. Susheel Kumar of Deogarh in Jharkhand may not agree, though. Susheel, one of the many migrant workers in Chennai, has been in the city since 2017. With the fierce onslaught of COVID in the second wave and the resulting lockdown, the Alandur manufacturing unit where he worked shut down. “I am leaving as I have no income here now. I have been doing…

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Translated by Sandhya Raju கோவிட்-19 தொற்றுக்கு எதிரான போராட்டத்தை வெல்ல தடுப்பூசி மிக அவசியம் என தற்போது பரவலாக ஒப்புக்கொள்ளப்பட்டாலும், இந்தியாவின் பெரும்பாலான நகரங்களில் தடுப்பூசி போட்டுக்கொள்வதில் மந்த நிலையே காணப்படுகிறது. எட்டப்பட வேண்டிய இலக்கை விட தினந்தோறும் தடுப்பூசி எண்ணிக்கை குறைவாகவே உள்ளது. மற்ற நகரங்களைப் போன்று சென்னையிலும் கடந்த ஜனவரி 16-ம் தேதி தடுப்பூசி தொடங்கப்பட்டது. முதல் கட்டமாக முன் களப்பணியாளர்கள், பின்னர் மூத்த குடிமக்கள், பின் 45 வயதுக்கு மேற்பட்டவர்கள் என பல்வேறு கட்டங்களில் தடுப்பூசி போடும் பணி மேற்கொள்ளப்பட்டது. மே மாதம் முதல் 18 வயது மேற்பட்டவர்களுக்கும் தடுப்பூசி போடப்படும் என அறிவிக்கப்பட்டது. ஆனால், நோக்கம் சரியாக இருந்தாலும், கள நிலவரம் வேறாக உள்ளது. தடுப்பூசி இருப்பு மற்றும் நிலை கோவிஷீல்ட், கோவேக்சின் என இரு பிரதான தடுப்பூசிகள் தற்போது போடப்படுகின்றன. மூன்றாவதாக, ரஷ்ய தயாரிப்பான ஸ்பட்னிக் சில தனியார் மருத்துவமனைகளில், ஒரு டோஸ்…

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And so, here we are, in yet another lockdown. The results are encouraging. The chain of transmission seems to be weakening, at least in Chennai, where the numbers have fallen precipitously. That is by itself a reason for commending the initiative. But what after the lockdown is lifted and we all go back to our normal activities to the extent possible? What happens when markets, shopping malls, places of entertainment, gyms, hair and beauty saloons, public transport and offices open up again? After all, they cannot be kept closed forever, can they? What then if the COVID numbers rise again?…

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