Hindustan Times (Delhi)

COVID-19: THE DAREDEVILS WHO DEFY SCIENTIFIC ADVICE

PICTURE OF THE WEEK NEWS OF THE WEEK INDIA

- AYAL APOOR

India’s Covid-19 cases are rising. Balram Bhargava, director-general of the Indian Council of Medical Research, has attributed the spread to irresponsi­ble citizens who refuse to follow the mandated preventive health guidelines of wearing masks and maintainin­g social distance. He said, “I wouldn’t say young or old, but irresponsi­ble, less-cautious people who are not wearing masks are driving the pandemic in India”.

Long is a recent adjective being used to describe Covid-19 because of its impact on the body much after being tested negative, and despite the body having enough antibodies. According to recent findings, recovered people may continue to suffer

SEPTEMBER 4: At the Mayor’s Conference in the Capital on Friday (From Left) Mr Hans Raj Gupta of Delhi,

Mr S Ganesan of Madras and Mr Shyam Sunder Gupta of Calcutta from severe lung and heart damage, muscle ache, energy loss, breathless­ness, memory issues, even psychologi­cal distress. This new informatio­n should instill fear, and motivate everyone to adopt all suggested preventive health behaviours such as wearing a mask, frequent hand washing, and maintainin­g social distance very sincerely.

Yet, many continue to go about their lives, refusing to follow simple preventive health guidelines, as if the world is already in a post-pandemic era. I am going to take the liberty to call all such people daredevils. Daredevils, by definition, are reckless people who enjoy doing dangerous things.

What is the link between a daredevil’s cognition of the ongoing pandemic and his motivation to be such a daredevil? In other words, what makes a daredevil expect a favourable outcome, of not getting infected, despite reckless behaviour? Prior research finds people can have favourable expectanci­es because of, and not limited to, any of these reasons — their self-belief and personal efficacy; because they think they are lucky; because they think they are favoured by God. According to Scheier and Carver (1987), the reason for favourable expectanci­es can be any of these but all of them will lead to an optimistic orientatio­n—that is, a general expectatio­n that only good things will happen to me.

An optimistic orientatio­n, that instills a positive outlook about the future, has been found to affect health decisions related to smoking, diet, and exercise, and explains why individual­s make choices that may have adverse effects on their health. It is quite plausible, and some recent research suggests so, that our daredevil may have a misplaced perception of the severity of Covid-19, almost like a denial, that may, in fact, be attributed to a high optimistic orientatio­n. Such biases in the perception of risk have been observed historical­ly in other pandemics too.

According to a health communicat­ion framework called Protection Motivation Theory, people tend to protect themselves based on their perception of the severity of a threatenin­g event, the perceived vulnerabil­ity related to the occurrence of the event, the efficacy of the recommende­d preventive behaviour, and their

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India