Integrated Control of COVID-19 in Resource Poor Countries
Author(s): Rugveda Thakre and Guddi Laishram*
Abstract
COVID-19 aka corona virus aka SARS-COV-2 a very unpredictable wrath on medical society. Raising its head in 2019 in Hubei province in Wuhan, China COVID-19 took many lives to be precise 51.7 lakh cases over worldwide and total affected cases are 25.9 cr. over the globe as per WHO.
The virus has indeed been attributed to inherent illnesses such high blood pressure, raised blood sugar, coronary artery illness, severe lung illnesses, malignancies, and weakened immunity systems. The pandemic's repercussions can be financial, compromising the medical arrangements and jeopardising individuals lives. Furthermore, elderly men have indeed been documented to have much more worse consequences of coronavirus disease than women. Nevertheless, there are indeed a number of characteristics associated with the context of traditional sexual identity which should be considered, given females in perhaps the most influenced portions are financially underprivileged as well as over worked.
When perceived through the prism of immigration, the financial consequences could very well be enormous and worldwide, intensifying xenophobic as well as unfair behaviour. An extra mental strain of such pandemic will indeed undoubtedly have an impact on people’s mind, specifically in disadvantaged communities. Sociological remoteness, for example, can weaken societal access to unique groups which rely on this for their regular activities throughout the instance of such a pandemic.
To aid those people as well as control this pandemic, comprehensive methods are required. COVID-19 management is problematic for low as well as middle economic revenue countries. Intensive care unit units and beds are few, and so are the medical supplies. The use of RT-PCR diagnostics is constrained, hence therapeutic choices are limited.