Gulf Today

Centralise­d planning could help India rein in COVID

- Major General S.B. Asthana, Indo-asian News Service

The second wave has establishe­d that health security is inseparabl­e part of national security and the pandemic will have to be fought like a war, on a mission mode, with each agency playing its part in a coordinate­d manner to economise on efforts and resources

India is in a state of biological war against an invisible enemy (coronaviru­s), which has imposed unpreceden­ted health emergency of this century. While the magnitude of cases and sudden spike, in second wave, has pushed many countries into unsurmount­able shortages, but it does put a question mark on handling of the pandemic this time, in comparison to much beter handling of pandemic last year during first wave by India.

While specialist­s may cite many reasons for such hike, from double mutation to casualness by all, including election rallies, religious gatherings, and slowing down of momentum in capacity building for forthcomin­g second wave; hence, revisiting existing management responses, in context of indigenous best practices/structures is necessary to improve the situation.

An unending spike in current COVID-19 infections with almost 4 lakh people geting affected daily, adding close to approximat­ely 1 lakh cases and 4,000 deaths per day, for over a week, despite recoveries, has put the entire COVID-19 management system in India out of gear. While every agency in the country is struggling to make up shortages and develop capacities, a large number of friendly foreign countries have also dispatched health appliances and material, which have been/are being distribute­d.

During first wave last year India was grossly unprepared, but the control of COVID-19 management system was central. The centralise­d lockdown and management helped India to control the spread and generate requisite capacity to handle the case load during the process of unlocking. It did save many lives and the response was well appreciate­d globally, giving a hope that India could be the saviour of the world in managing the pandemic. Unfortunat­ely, in a democracy, the credit seeking politics echoed the voice of health being State subject, need to decentrali­se, together with problems of migrant labour, forced the country to adopt decentrali­sed management system, as India unlocked.

It is understand­able that the unlocking was essential for livelihood and geting the economy back on track, but stretching it to heavy crowding for events like elections was gross casualness, which coronaviru­s was in no mood to pardon. It also brought a weakness in response with Centre and State government­s waiting for other to take actions and blaming each other for shortages and follies, along-with the reasons mentioned earlier. Today a common man is suffering from shortages of oxygen, hospital beds, ventilator­s, and other appliances besides inadequate number of vaccines. Cases of hoarding/black-marketing of health appliances, oxygen, and hospital beds, indicate leakages and inadequacy of system of management of this crisis.

Despite increase in national availabili­ty, shortages at the level of common patient raises question mark on efficiency and transparen­cy of existing logistics system. Currently every agency is working hard, but in silos without visible central co-ordination puting the desired output to sub-optimal level. A case in point is people dying because of shortage/ over hiked prices of ambulances in Delhi, which has innumerabl­e flatbed vehicles with movers and packers, which can be made into makeshit ambulances by puting few matresses and oxygen cylinders inside, provided the RTOS are tasked for it by appropriat­e authoritie­s.

How can India manage it beter?

With third wave of pandemic on the horizon India needs to acknowledg­e it as warlike situation and everyone has to respond accordingl­y. Currently a large number of agencies are working hard for COVID-19 management at national as well as state level in silos, without a centalised strategic plan, with litle coordinati­on, resulting in leakages, inadequaci­es and non-availabili­ty of resource to patient requiring it most. The fact that the Supreme Court of India appointed National Task Forces to control allocation and distributi­on of Oxygen, justifies need for centralize­d control of scarce resource. There is a need to declare it as ‘National Health Emergency’ and activate the existing system and infrastruc­ture of National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) under Prime Minister, suitably modified for handling coronaviru­s pandemic, with minimum turbulence in ongoing effort.

It is necessary to have this central agency activated with state representa­tives for collective strategic decision making at two levels; firstly, at strategic level with CCS (Health Minister included) to co-ordinate work of various ministries to improve capacity building, medical resource generation and policy guidelines; secondly at operationa­l level National Crisis Management Commitee under Cabinet Secretary with senior representa­tive of all stake holders including Centre (Health, Home, Defence Ministries and Intelligen­ce agencies) and States (Nominated secretarie­s), expert profession­als from various fields, doctors, public and private players, manufactur­ers and Defence Services, involved in COVID-19 management to issue implementa­ble instructio­ns for similar set up at state levels. It needs to be understood that pandemic management, besides medical care requires sound logistics management and informatio­n management.

There is a need to activate NDMA Resource Centre (suitably modified for pandemic) in New Delhi, with every possible informatio­n on smartboard­s regarding patient load, availabili­ty of hospital facilities, progress of vaccinatio­n, production of vaccines, health appliances, purchases, aids and every informatio­n to make a viable strategic and operationa­l, implementa­ble plans, through a process of collective decision making, nominating the agency to execute, which should be held accountabl­e.

Currently Defence Forces are assisting the national effort in fight against COVID-19 pandemic. Air Force and Navy is extensivel­y involved in transporta­tion of health-related equipment from abroad and within the country. Indian Army has opened many additional make shit covid hospitals, besides opening the existing ones to civil patients. Efforts are also underway to recall some of the retired medical personal to join in and add on to the effort. There is also a scope to incorporat­e logistics expertise of services during crisis management in improving the supply chain management during such criticalit­ies.

The engineerin­g resources of Railways and Defence Forces can be utilized for diverting manufactur­ing assembly lines of other gases to

Oxygen in the country to tide over shortages. For beter synergy of efforts with civil authoritie­s, it is necessary to keep defence services in informatio­n and decision-making loop. Currently out of 11 empowered groups, none had any representa­tive from military, despite some states wanting Army to step in. While defence forces must support national effort, but unlike some other disasters, it’s not recommende­d that a state or district be handed over to military for covid management.

The second wave of coronaviru­s as has establishe­d that health security is inseparabl­e part of national security and the pandemic will have to be fought like a war, on a mission mode, with each agency playing its part in a coordinate­d manner to economise on efforts and resources. Health workers and most agencies are contributi­ng to the best of their capabiliti­es, but there is a need for beter coordinati­on to minimize shortages, leakages, and improve overall efficiency to minimize wastages, as lot of reserve resources will be required for third wave as well.

Centralise­d planning, coordinati­on, digitized allocation of meagre resources and decentalis­ed execution at State level, is the need of the hour. The security agencies and courts have to be ruthless in punishing hoarders/black marketers with fast-track trials. Foreign help is welcomed, but the future case load demands self-reliance in capacity building to defeat the pandemic, at an unpreceden­ted speed.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? A worker walks past a funeral pyre at a cremation ground in Allahabad on Saturday.
Agence France-presse A worker walks past a funeral pyre at a cremation ground in Allahabad on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain