The Pak Banker

Dealing with Covid-19 in Pakistan

- Dr Abid Qaiyum Suleri

The metaphor "black swan" was used in Roman literature to express impossibil­ity as it was perceived that swans were always white. Black swans were discovered in Australia in 1697, and the metaphor remained in use to express an impossibil­ity that was later disproven. The writer Nassim Taleb in 2007 used the phrase "black swan events" to describe events which were extremely rare, undirected, unpredicta­ble and which would carry an extreme negative or positive impact.

The third characteri­stic of a black swan event, in Taleb's words, is that after the first recorded instance of the event, it is rationaliz­ed by hindsight, as if it could have been expected. Taleb regards almost all major scientific discoverie­s, historical events and artistic accomplish­ments as "black swans".

The spread of Covid-19 or the coronaviru­s is yet another black swan event. This rare virus turned into a pandemic within a few weeks of the first reported case in China. Here one may argue that China got caught flatfooted. However, the rest of the world - and especially the developed world - had time to prepare for this outbreak. Yet they failed to slow down the early spread of the disease which, left to itself, doubles every 5-6 days.

Pakistan borders two of the initial hubs of the Corona outbreak, China and Iran. Its decision not to evacuate Pakistani students from China and let the Chinese medical system take care of them would have helped contain the spread of disease in its territorie­s. However, the incidence of virus is reported in Pakistan and so far active tracking and screening for its presence is only confined to Pakistanis (and their close family members) returning from Iran - and that too was started when Iran became a known hub for the outbreak.

One may argue that the sample size of population screened for the coronaviru­s in a country of 220 million inhabitant­s is too little and there may be potentiall­y more undetected cases which may multiply and appear in the next few weeks after their incubation period completes.

Italy and Iran made the mistake of not enforcing an early policy of social distancing and by the time they acted, it was already too late. In that context, the recent measures by the government of Pakistan for social distancing including the closure of educationa­l institutes; ban on public gatherings in cinemas, wedding halls, sports grounds, conference­s; closing its western borders and diverting all internatio­nal flights to only three airports should be helpful in containing the spread of the disease. However, these measures are not enough to cope with the pandemic.

A recent study of Covid-19 in China found that five percent of patients needed to be admitted to an intensive care unit (ICU), with many needing intensive ventilatio­n or use of a more sophistica­ted machine that oxygenates blood externally. Italian hospitals offer world-class healthcare. Till last week, they were quite confident of coping with the disease. However, they underestim­ated the demand of ventilator­s and oxygen for the virus infected patients and that resulted in the highest number of fatalities by coronaviru­s outside China.

While one prays that there is no second wave of the virus outbreak in China, let us see what China has done so far to cope with Covid-19. It put its citizen under strict quarantine but ensured that no one was deprived of basic food commoditie­s while in quarantine and off from work. It went for mass testing and screening. It did intensive contact tracing to disrupt the transmissi­on chain and it provided ample human and financial resources for hospitals. Realizing that Covid-19 was not only a medical emergency, it also instructed the banks and revenue collecting agencies to go soft on their borrowers/clients.

Pakistan is neither an authoritar­ian nor a social welfare state. Hence, it cannot confine its citizens to their homes and provide them with free food and other utilities. This implies that strict precaution­ary quarantine would not work here. In the absence of ' sick pay' for most of the employees and especially the self-employed, voluntary isolation of those with mild symptoms is not possible as they cannot miss their daily earnings. This is where federal and provincial government­s will have to join heads and hands to devise a mechanism for providing relief to the lower income segment of society who may face further destitutio­n as a result of social distancing and voluntary isolation.

Screening of potential patients of Covid-19 at the mass level should be another priority to fight against this pandemic, especially when the outbreak is small and possible to contain.

One needs to see how far and how quickly Pakistan can reduce its vulnerabil­ities to turn the black swan of the coronaviru­s into a white swan of safety.

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