Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Keeping more than an arm’s length new normal

- Jayashree Nandi jayashree.nandi@htlive.com

Rarely have we been mindful of others when we sneeze or cough; that might change.

NEW DELHI: At a pharmacy in a south Delhi colony, customers were standing outside the store with a one-metre distance between each other on Sunday. One of the customers handed over his debit card to the pharmacist but wasn’t allowed to enter the PIN himself. He had to announce the four-digit code to the pharmacist at the counter who made the transactio­n and handed over the card with his gloved hands.

Another customer wanted the pharmacist to speak to the customer’s employer because he could not pronounce the name of the medicine he wanted. “Please ask your employer to message us. We cannot speak on your mobile phone with him,” the pharmacist said. The man appeared disappoint­ed because he couldn’t get the medicine his employer needed. Other c ustomers explained that sharing phones was not possible anymore. There are several such instances of how daily life has changed.

We will not be the same again after the lockdown lifts. The new

DIPANKAR GUPTA, Sociologis­t normal for several months will be to maintain social distance in everything we do, maintain personal hygiene and get used to relatively slow life in cities.

The first and most positive behavioura­l change is likely to be the maintenanc­e of cough hygiene as people realise that coughing into the crook of their arm is good for them and others.

“Rarely have we been mindful of others when we sneeze or cough; that might change. We may begin to realise that how others behave will keep us healthy. This may lay the groundwork of an enduring policy for public health where everybody matters and no wall is high enough to protect classes and people from each other,” Dipankar Gupta, a sociologis­t, said. However. the question is how such behaviour will be practised in slums, where around 24% of the urban population in India lives, according to a World Bank estimate. “The government should have made a specific policy for densely populated areas by now because the infection will spread there. How the future unfolds for them will depend on those policies,” Dr T Jacob John, veteran virologist, emeritus professor at the Christian Medical College, Vellore, said.

Amita Baviskar, a sociologis­t who specialise­s in social inequality and environmen­t, said, “Everything depends on who is this ‘we’ we are talking about. A middle class ‘we’ exercises the choice of who they wish to socialise with...it is already secluding itself. But this middle class is also dependent on plumbers, electricia­ns and domestic workers. These needs will dilute the extent to which disease can be controlled.”

There is scientific evidence to back the need to continue social distancing. A study by Leverhulme Centre for Demographi­c Science, University of Oxford & Nuffield College, the UK, which is yet to be printed, has said the demographi­c and social structure of Italy has made it vulnerable to the onslaught of Covid-19. Italy has the second-highest population of old persons with 23.3% of its population over the age of 65, compared to 12% in China. It is also characteri­sed by extensive intergener­ational contact, with most children living with parents and grandparen­ts.

A 2007 study reviewing the public health interventi­ons of the 1918 influenza pandemic found cities in which multiple interventi­ons like closing of schools and theatres, and social distancing were implemente­d at an early phase of the epidemic had peak death rates nearly 50% lower than those that did not.

“Humanity is no stranger to this kind of epidemic but every age expects its relationsh­ip with nature and disease will be different. I find that somewhat arrogant. It’s very difficult to say how we will behave socially,” Satish Deshpande, a professor of sociology at Delhi School of Economics, said. The health ministry has launched a psycho-social-behavioura­l helpline on Sunday which has a toll-free number—0804611000­7 and is supposed to address people’s mental health concerns.

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