WAKE-UP CALL

RAJNI SHARMA

COVID-19, by its high transmission tendency and no vaccine yet available for its cure,  has  created such a kind of catastrophe in the whole world that besides World Health Organisation (WHO), more than one  hundred fifty  countries in the world  in one way or the other have prioritised the immediate need to combat it.

As the experts say, still no medicinal treatment by any specific vaccine is available yet to cure the positive cases of Covid-19 and accordingly the only option remains to stop it’s accelerating rate of transmission by social distancing. But does this  mean that by opting  for the  complete “lockdown” there is no need to roll out the much essential health sector, no. The fact is that the continuous increase in the pandemic COVID-19 is  day by day overburdening the load on the shoulders of health authorities. The elderly positive Covid-19 patients with other ailments need to be taken care of, which is possible with the good quality health sector and the role of medicos.

Besides taking care of  such kind of elderly patients, medicos have and are working with utmost efforts to stop its transmission by one way or the other while putting their own lives to high risk. They are as if the warriors in the battle field without the weapons, and are still playing a heroic part.

No doubt they can’t treat this disease by any medicine but their contribution, which we are witnessing at present in the way they make every facility available like testing, facilitating quarantine,  advising the people, giving health education, their knowledge about the ways of transmission of disease, is all need of the hour.

When some of the world’s developed countries  like China, Italy,  France,  Spain, and  United States, besides getting their economies affected have faced a huge damage after  losing  human lives in big numbers due the deadly disease of Covid-19, the two south Asian  neighbours India and Pakistan,  who were mostly seen sharing heated statements  and always used to lock horns against each other to suppress one another’s tall claims of military power,  have subsequently expressed  their  inefficiencies to be fully equipped to deal with this catastrophe, which  is brought by a tinny biological entity called coronavirus. Both seem helpless to fight against it, with the much needed necessary facilities in terms of infrastructure like sufficient no of good  hospitals, number of specious and separate  wards in hospitals for quarantine, sufficient ventilators required during such kind of catastrophe, needed number of testing labs,  safety gears for medical staff,  sufficient medical staff in all hospitals and all  _which they  ironically don’t even have  with regard to the low standard of their respective health sectors.

Both the countries have been putting their efforts to empower defence sector of their countries with lesser focus on health. Like Pakistan, India too has  made defence it’s priority in terms of its yearly budgets  instead of health sector over past many years. It is very evident from this year’s budget.  India, as it’s  defence budget for 2020-2021 has earmarked Rs. 4,71,378 crore  for the Ministry of Defence (MoD), stated that national security is a top priority of the government. Where as the total allocation of Rs 69,000 crore only  was earmarked for the health sector in Union Budget 2020-21 which  was  just about 10 per cent higher from the last year.

This  gap of  focus  between the most important and necessary  sector which is health and defence, has led both the countries to the juncture where they are now paying for it, at time when the crisis are more  but options to deal with them  are least.