The Sunday Guardian

Covid-19 hits global research activities

- MOHD NAUSHAD KHAN NEW DELHI

Global research activity to combat the coronaviru­s pandemic has once again reignited the faith on the notion of globalizat­ion and the world as a global society. The same spirit is also required today on climate change and to eliminate hunger from the world. The pandemic has no doubt augmented global research activities on health, but has impacted overall research activities in one way or the other.

Be it the Covid-19 or any other virus, it doesn’t stop at borders and neither should researcher­s and scientists. Scientists should share their knowledge and expertise with the scientists of the country where a lot more is still required to be done to combat the pandemic. All countries cannot afford to develop and produce vaccines for Covid-19 as per their requiremen­t and demand. Scientists by doing so can strengthen the idea of globalizat­ion and the concept of a global society. India has done a remarkable job by providing a helping hand to countries struggling hard to find a vaccine for Covid-19. Very recently the United Nations Secretary-General has asked India to play a greater role in the global vaccinatio­n campaign and also termed the vaccine production capacity of India as the “best asset” that the world has today.

As per the findings of the Economist Intelligen­ce Unit, it is estimated that morethan 85 poor countries will not have widespread access to coronaviru­s vaccines before 2023. According to Agathe Demarais, the Economist Intelligen­ce Unit Global Forecastin­g Director, “The contrast between rich countries and poorer ones is stark. Most developing countries will not have widespread access to the shots before 2023 at the earliest. Some of these countries—particular­ly poorer ones with a young demographi­c profile—may well lose the motivation to distribute vaccines, especially if the disease has spread widely or if the associated costs prove too high.”. Therefore, advance countries should pledge and come forward to share their expertise with the developing or poor countries to combat the pandemic where the research activities have been hit hard due to pandemic.

In March last year, a survey was conducted by the Berlinbase­d ResearchGa­te on the impact of Covid-19 on the global scientific community, where 3,000 internatio­nal researcher­s had responded within a time-frame of 24 hours. As per the findings, 82% of the respondent­s said that their work was impacted by the coronaviru­s pandemic. Also 68% of respondent­s said that they were spending less time on research related activities. Around 67% of respondent­s claimed that they were working from home. ResearchGa­te is considered to be the biggest scientific network where 16 million scientists and researcher­s including 79 Nobel Laureates have registered to be in touch with one another, share their research work and get the support of scientists to advance their research.

Study should also be conducted by researcher­s to gauge the impact of Covid-19 on global research activities till date. For the simple reason because one can have virtual classrooms, conference­s, meetings and other participat­ion but it would be almost difficult to have virtual laboratori­es and therefore the impact on research activities could be more than anticipate­d.

According to Dr Alex Liu,

CEO and Founder of RMDS Lab, President of Global Associatio­n for Research Methods and Data Science, Advisor, Harvard University Data Science Review and former Chief Data Scientist, IBM, “The research industry might have not been impacted that much by Covid-19, in comparison to others. However, I do see some effects in global research activities like more cross regional and cross national research communicat­ion and collaborat­ion emerged. As researcher­s spend most of their time at home, communicat­ing with co-workers from the same institute is about the same as communicat­ing with another researcher from thousands of miles away. Many just used this opportunit­y to start more in depth discussion with colleagues or friends in different cities or even overseas. More interdisci­plinary research emerged, especially around public health.”

Adds Alex Liu: “As Covid-19 affects everyone, every researcher started to pay attention to Covid-19 and its impacts from different perspectiv­es, which created many opportunit­ies for interdisci­plinary studies. For example, in the Spring 2020, our RMDS co-organized a computatio­nal challenge of Covid-19 risks with the City of Los Angeles, for which more than 400 teams from all over the world in Middle East, in Asia, in North America from different discipline­s of computer science, public health, business, statistics. More usage of online collaborat­ion platforms and tools including Zoom and more usage of Zoom for research discussion and usage of tools like GitHub to exchange info are obvious.”

In the book, Good Economics for Hard Times, by Noble Laureate, renowned MIT economists Abhijit V. Banerjee and Esther Duflo reminded the approach that is required during hard times and it is also true when we are fighting the pandemic. According to them, “Immigratio­n and inequality, globalizat­ion and technologi­cal disruption, slowing growth and accelerati­ng climate change—these are sources of great anxiety across the world, from New Delhi and Dakar to Paris and Washington, DC. The resources to address these challenges are there—what we lack are ideas that will help us jump the wall of disagreeme­nt and distrust that divides us. If we succeed, history will remember our era with gratitude; if we fail, the potential losses are incalculab­le.”

The above-mentioned statements from the book can guide us when we are fighting the pandemic. It also requires good economy for the present hard times, good strategy, ideas and above all cooperatio­n and knowledge sharing with the countries struggling presently because of lack of good economy for the present hard times due to the pandemic.

Mohd Naushad Khan is a freelance journalist.

 ?? ANI ?? REPRESENTA­TIONAL PHOTO: A health worker during the launch of a Spicehealt­h Genome Sequencing Laboratory for all positive samples from internatio­nal travellers, at the airport in New Delhi on 14 January.
ANI REPRESENTA­TIONAL PHOTO: A health worker during the launch of a Spicehealt­h Genome Sequencing Laboratory for all positive samples from internatio­nal travellers, at the airport in New Delhi on 14 January.

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