Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Dealing with the human condition

Uncertaint­y leads to anxiety, guilt, panic. Respond better

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The suicide of a man, who was admitted to Delhi’s Safdarjung Hospital after flying in from Sydney, even as test results to ascertain whether he had the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19) were awaited, is a wake-up call. There has been commentary on safety measures required to deal with the outbreak and the individual, social and institutio­nal actions required. But not enough attention has been paid to the toll the disease — and the messaging around it — is taking on mental health.

Covid-19 is new. Rarely, if ever, in recent history have human beings across the world — be in Boston or Bengaluru, Wuhan or Doha, Rome or Seoul — experience­d a common set of concerns, driven by a single factor. From its roots to its symptoms, from its treatment protocol to a possible cure, uncertaint­y is rife. This uncertaint­y is causing fear, anxiety, panic among people — about themselves, about their loved ones, about their future. This is coupled with a sense of shame among those who are either suspected or have the infection, because of the stigmatisa­tion of Covid-19 patients. Yes, there are people who could have been more careful; yes, there has been a streak of irresponsi­bility in those should have followed treatment protocols. But it must be emphasised that a patient who gets infected is not guilty, but is actually a victim. Targeting individual­s or families with traces of the case is wrong. Unacceptab­le racial attacks — be it against Chinese-origin Americans in the United States or against people from the Northeast in India — is only adding to this sense of vulnerabil­ity. Misinforma­tion is not helping.

The government must weave in the mental health dimension in the way it approaches Covid-19. There has to be sustained counsellin­g and therapy for patients and suspected cases. There has to be better messaging, which battles the sense of shame associated with Covid-19 and emphasises that social distancing is a temporary measure and patients are not criminals. There has to be kindness and empathy in the way families, neighbours, and communitie­s engage with each other. Only a humane response can help deal with the deeply vulnerable human condition of these times.

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