107 results
Search Results
2. Urbanization and COVID-19 Prevalence in India.
- Author
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Sridhar, Kala S.
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,CITIES & towns ,URBANIZATION ,URBAN poor ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
Copyright of Regional Science Policy & Practice is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
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3. Urbanization and COVID‐19 Prevalence in India.
- Author
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Sridhar, Kala S.
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,CITIES & towns ,URBANIZATION ,URBAN poor ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
Copyright of Regional Science Policy & Practice is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Analysis and prediction of COVID‐19 trajectory: A machine learning approach.
- Author
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Majhi, Ritanjali, Thangeda, Rahul, Sugasi, Renu Prasad, and Kumar, Niraj
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,MACHINE learning ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PREDICTION models - Abstract
The outbreak of Coronavirus 2019 (COVID‐19) has impacted everyday lives globally. The number of positive cases is growing and India is now one of the most affected countries. This paper builds predictive models that can predict the number of positive cases with higher accuracy. Regression‐based, Decision tree‐based, and Random forest‐based models have been built on the data from China and are validated on India's sample. The model is found to be effective and will be able to predict the positive number of cases in the future with minimal error. The developed machine learning model can work in real‐time and can effectively predict the number of positive cases. Key measures and suggestions have been put forward considering the effect of lockdown. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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5. COVID‐19 and the legislative response in India: The need for a comprehensive health care law.
- Author
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Gowd, Kiran Kumar, Veerababu, Donthagani, and Reddy, Veeraiahgari Revanth
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PUBLIC health laws ,PANDEMICS ,EMERGENCY management ,CITIZENSHIP - Abstract
The outbreak of the SARS CoV2 virus, commonly referred to as the COVID‐19 pandemic, has impacted the social, economic, political, and cultural lives of citizens around the world. The sudden outbreak of the pandemic has exposed the legal preparedness, or lack thereof, of governments to reduce and contain its drastic impact. Strong legislative measures play a crucial role in any epidemic or pandemic situation. In this situation, the Indian Government has requested all state governments to invoke the Epidemic Disease Act (EDA) of 1897 to address the COVID‐19 emergency. The Central Government has also used the powers provided in the Disaster Management Act (DMA) of 2005. As the country is facing its first major health emergency since independence, the existing legislative measures to deal with a COVID‐19 like situation are lacking and require certain amendments to address such situations in the future. This paper aims to present the current constitutional and legislative response to health emergencies in India and attempts to identify gray areas in the statutory provisions. Based on the analysis, this paper suggests several recommendations for amending current legislation and suggests the promulgation of comprehensive public health law. This paper is largely based on primary sources such as the EDA and the DMA, regulations, guidelines, rules issued by the public authorities and court cases related to health and health emergencies along with secondary resources such as newspaper articles and published papers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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6. Can R&D investment reduce the impact of COVID‐19 on firm performance?—Evidence from India.
- Author
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Biswas, Shreya
- Subjects
ORGANIZATIONAL performance ,RETURNS on sales ,ABNORMAL returns ,COVID-19 ,INTERVENTION (Federal government) ,STOCKHOLDER wealth ,VOLATILITY (Securities) ,INSIDER trading in securities - Abstract
This study examines whether investing in R&D reduces the impact of exogenous shocks like the COVID‐19 on stock market performance and accounting performance of manufacturing firms in India. For the sample of listed manufacturing firms, the paper finds that the firms engaged in R&D activities had lower negative cumulative abnormal return than those firms that did not invest in R&D in the pre‐pandemic period using multiple event windows. The result suggests that R&D investments can lower value erosion for the shareholders during a severe crisis period. Further, using a difference‐in‐difference fixed effects model, the study finds that manufacturing firms engaged in R&D activities in the pre‐pandemic period exhibited higher return on sales and growth of total income during the pandemic quarter vis‐à‐vis the non‐R&D firms. The favorable accounting performance indicates the possibility of firm‐level R&D being associated with the firm's ability to adjust its functioning during a crisis, thereby reducing the effect of the crisis. Finally, the study documents that government intervention to reduce the spread of the virus had a differential impact on firms based on their industry of operation. The findings have implications for investors, corporate managers, and policymakers in India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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7. Utilization of clinical practice guidelines for cancer care in routine practice and during the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic in India.
- Author
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Mathur, Prashant, Ramamoorthy, Thilagavathi, Lakshminarayana, Sudarshan Kondalli, Nath, Anita, Mathew, Stany, and Rajput, Gurpreet Kaur
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COVID-19 pandemic ,CANCER treatment ,COVID-19 ,HEALTH facilities ,HYPERLINKS ,CORONAVIRUS diseases - Abstract
Aim: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) pandemic affected cancer service delivery and the feasibility of following the standard treatment guidelines. The present paper describes the use of clinical care guidelines for cancer management in routine practice and the approach adopted towards cancer care during the COVID‐19 pandemic in India. Methods: A web‐based survey was done in 107 hospitals (including public and private health facilities) that hosted Hospital‐Based Cancer Registries under the National Cancer Registry Programme. The participants comprised Principal Investigators of these registries, who were also medical, surgical, and radiation oncology clinicians. The survey was done between May 1, 2021, and July 31, 2021. Participants were provided with a web link for the survey questionnaire, confidential login, and password. Results: The study found high utilization of Clinical Practice Guidelines (CPGs) during practice, with eight out of ten physicians constantly to referring them. The study reported lack of knowledge, skills, and training to administer the treatment based on the guidelines followed by organizational infrastructure and affordability of treatment by the patients as the factors hampering utilization. International clinical guidelines were preferred when compared to national guidelines. The COVID‐19 pandemic decreased the use of CPGs, wherein six out of ten clinicians reported their use. Conclusion: Stakeholders who formulate clinical guidelines must consider the practical aspects and feasibility of implementing such guidelines during a pandemic and similar situations. This should be coupled with adequate changes in care practice to ensure optimal care delivery and a continuum of cancer care in routine and pandemic‐imposed situations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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8. Coordination of Monetary and Fiscal Policies for Growth with Price Stability in a Post‐COVID‐19 Indian Economy*.
- Author
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Arora, Nitin, Monga, Shubham, and Sharma, Dilpreet
- Subjects
FISCAL policy ,PRICE regulation ,MONETARY policy ,PRICE increases ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PRICE inflation - Abstract
During the post‐COVID period, demand augmenting policies were needed and have been exercised by the Government of India to prevent the Indian economy from falling into recession. However, these demand augmenting policies seem to be inflationary as in the recent past high inflation has been observed in India. Thus, optimum combination of monetary and fiscal policies is needed to simultaneously achieve the objectives of demand growth and price stability. This paper proposes combinations of the two policies based on the results of a sign‐restricted vector autoregressive (VAR) modelling framework. The experimentation was performed using sign restrictions on macroeconomic target variables viz. demand growth and inflation rate while leaving the policy variables free to suggest proposed stances to achieve desired objectives. On the basis of the empirical findings, the proposed stances of monetary and fiscal authorities were then compared with the actual stances and requisite correction in the policy behaviours has been suggested in terms of improvements to the magnitude and frequency of contraction and expansion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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9. COVID‐19 and India's vulnerable indigenous populations.
- Author
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Agoramoorthy, Govindasamy and Hsu, Minna J.
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INDIGENOUS peoples ,COVID-19 ,HEALTH facilities ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,VIRAL transmission - Abstract
India's indigenous communities represent 8% of the total population and 25% of them are listed as the most impoverished (Government of India, 2011). The COVID-19 pandemic has already infected over 70 000 indigenous people with 2000 deaths (WHO, 2020). A quick search of the word "COVID-19" in Web of Science database for 2020 has yielded 41 798 papers and when the phrase "COVID-19 indigenous people" was used, it yielded only 38 papers. Likewise in March 2020, the Chhattisgarh state government reported only six COVID-19 cases (Raju, 2020). [Extracted from the article]
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- 2022
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10. A modified variable‐order fractional SIR model to predict the spread of COVID‐19 in India.
- Author
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Singh, Abhishek Kumar, Mehra, Mani, and Gulyani, Samarth
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,STAY-at-home orders ,FRACTIONAL differential equations ,COVID-19 ,FRACTIONS ,DIFFERENTIAL evolution - Abstract
The first case of COVID‐19 in India detected on January 30, 2020, after its emergence in Wuhan, China, in December 2019. The lockdown was imposed as anemergency measure by the Indian government to prevent the spread of COVID‐19 but gradually eased out due to its vast economic consequences. Just 15 days after the relaxation of lockdown restrictions, Delhi became India's worst city in terms of COVID‐19 cases. In this paper, we propose a variable‐order fractional SIR (susceptible, infected, removed) model at state‐level scale. We introduce a algorithm that uses the differential evolution algorithm in combination with Adam–Bashforth–Moulton method to learn the parameters in a system of variable‐order fractional SIR model. The model can predict the confirm COVID‐19 cases in India considering the effects of nationwide lockdown and the possible estimate of the number of infliction inactive cases after the removal of lockdown on June 1, 2020. A new parameter p is introduced in the classical SIR model representing the fraction of infected people that get tested and are thereby quarantined. The COVID‐19 trajectory in Delhi, as per our model, predicts the slowing down of the spread between January and February 2021, touching a peak of around 5 lakh confirmed cases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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11. Micro models of COVID 19 pandemic governance: Reflections on the strategies taken by two states in India.
- Author
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Dash, Roma Ranu and AR, Anupama
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,COVID-19 ,COOPERATIVE federalism ,SOCIAL development ,DISASTERS ,NATURAL disasters ,DEATH rate - Abstract
Since the outbreak of the Covid 19 pandemic, governments across the world including India, a South‐Asian country is busy 'strategizing', 'managing' 'containing' the crisis to restrict its spread. But given the vastness and diversity of the Indian territory, one pan Indian model of is not possible and the states have been working in consonance with the centre in a matter of 'cooperative federalism' and are implementing various micro models of Covid 19 governance. This paper explores the micro models of governance strategies taken by states in India namely, Kerala located in its Southern coast and Odisha in the Eastern coast which have been experiencing disasters be it health or natural calamities. Inspite of the differences in social development indicators between both the states, they have managed to keep the death rates lower in the initial phases of the outbreak in comparison to other states. This is reflected in the strategies they took in controlling the pandemic like "preparedness" "decentralisation", "community participation". However, inspite of deploying various governance models, the gradual unlocking led to the explosion of positive cases as a result of which the challenges to deal with the pandemic still looms large. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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12. The outbreak of COVID‐19 pandemic and its impact on stock market volatility: Evidence from a worst‐affected economy.
- Author
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Bora, Debakshi and Basistha, Daisy
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COVID-19 pandemic ,VOLATILITY (Securities) ,MARKET volatility ,STOCK exchanges ,ARCH model (Econometrics) ,STOCK price indexes ,COVID-19 - Abstract
This paper empirically investigates the impact of COVID‐19 on the volatility of stock prices in India with the help of a generalized autoregressive conditional heteroscedasticity model. Daily closing prices of stock indices, Nifty and Sensex from September 3, 2019 to July 10, 2020 has been used for the analysis. Further, the study has been attempted to make a comparison of stock price return in pre‐COVID‐19 and during COVID‐19 situation. Findings reveal that the stock market in India has experienced volatility during the pandemic period. While comparing the result during COVID period with that of the pre‐COVID, we found that the return on the indices is higher in the pre‐COVID‐19 period than during COVID‐19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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13. Poverty in India in the face of Covid‐19: Diagnosis and prospects*.
- Author
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Dang, Hai‐Anh, Lanjouw, Peter, and Vrijburg, Elise
- Subjects
COVID-19 testing ,COVID-19 pandemic ,POVERTY ,VIRAL transmission ,POVERTY rate ,RURAL poor ,STAGNATION (Economics) - Abstract
India has been hard‐hit by the Covid‐19 pandemic. The virus has exacted a heavy toll in terms of lives lost and deteriorating health outcomes. The economic consequences of the pandemic have been similarly grim. In this paper we attempt an initial, interim, assessment of the impacts of the crisis on poverty. We review the growing literature that considers emerging poverty impacts, noting that there remain significant knowledge gaps due to limited evidence on current welfare outcomes. We analyze pre‐Covid survey data to examine the incidence of chronic poverty and downward mobility during a period of rapid economic growth and declining poverty. A profile of poverty during such a period might offer a plausible, partial, window on population groups currently at risk. We suggest that, notwithstanding the severe initial impacts of the crisis on poverty, there are grounds for expecting further consequences going forward. As the virus has spread out of the relatively affluent cities, and as economic stagnation persists, rural areas, with historically higher rates of chronic poverty and vulnerability, may see particularly sharp increases in poverty. While recent vaccination developments offer some grounds for optimism, there remains an urgent need to identify, implement and amplify effective policy alleviation measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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14. Managerial competencies: A comparative study of US‐India employer's needs.
- Author
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Agnihotri, Amit and Misra, Rajnish Kumar
- Subjects
EXECUTIVE ability (Management) ,JOB performance ,LITERATURE reviews ,ORGANIZATIONAL performance ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
COVID‐19 pandemic brought novel challenges for society and businesses. Along with psychological impact on humans, COVID‐19 led to significant changes in business processes. Managerial competencies, which positively impact performance of both the employees and businesses, are influenced by changing social and business context. In this milieu, there is a call for research to understand the impact of recent changes on managerial competencies to make them future‐ready. Further, in light of prior studies that present opposing findings, a related question worth exploring is—does the importance of managerial competencies differ across countries? By answering these questions, key competencies, that can boost both employee performance and business profitability, can be assessed and nurtured for a positive global impact. This paper presents theoretical background, methodology, findings and implications from a two‐part study that was conducted to answer above questions. Phase 1, which included literature review, analysis of US Government's O*NET database and expert validation, yielded a unique 9 × 51 Managerial Competencies Framework. Using quantitative methodology, that involved primary survey of Indian experts and hypothesis testing on matching data‐sets, Phase 2 of this cross‐country study reports a broad agreement amongst US and Indian experts on the importance of key managerial competencies. Study offers many theoretical and practical implications, along with directions for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Consumers' behavioral intention toward online shopping in the post‐COVID‐19 period.
- Author
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Khatoon, Sabiha, Anwar, Imran, Shamsi, Mushahid Ali, and Chaudhary, Asiya
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ONLINE shopping ,CONSUMER attitudes ,CONSUMER behavior ,COVID-19 pandemic ,CONSUMERS ,INTENTION - Abstract
Infectious COVID‐19 transformed the world overnight, freezing all physical activities and forcing the majority toward online mode. Technology came up as a savior to alleviate the consequences of COVID‐19 on the economy, causing a rapid transformation in consumers' behavior, and an overall jump in the sale of e‐commerce could be witnessed globally. This paper aims to explore the factors that caused the transformation in consumers' behavioral attitude (AT) and intention toward online shopping (BITOS). The study integrates the TPB and UTAUT models while adding two additional variables, namely, perceived risks (PR) and perceived benefits (PB), to predict consumers' BITOS. A survey was conducted to collect a sample of 402 consumers Aligarh city, and the National Capital Region of India using the mall intercept sampling method. The data were analysed to establish the measurement model and test the hypothesized structural model with the Smart‐PLS software. The study's findings confirmed that PB, subjective social norms, perceived ease of use, and perceived usefulness positively affect AT and BITOS, whereas PR does not influence AT and BITOS. The study also indicated that AT has a positive effect on BITOS. Concerning AT, it does not mediate the relationship between PR and BITOS; however, it mediates between the direct link PB and BITOS, making it stronger. The study's findings help the E‐commerce industry understand consumers' transformed attitudes/intentions and restructure their strategies to strengthen their online business further. Despite its regional and design limitations, it contributes significantly to the current research on online shopping behavior in India during COVID‐19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Effectiveness of public policy in reviving the COVID‐19 hit economy: Evidences from Kerala, India.
- Author
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Mohammed Kasim, Chakkungal, Azad, Parambengal, Muhammed Refeque, Eanthen, and Maya, Kizhayoor
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GOVERNMENT policy ,SOCIAL security beneficiaries ,COVID-19 ,FAMILY size ,INTERVENTION (Federal government) - Abstract
The economic crisis triggered by the COVID‐19 urgently required active policy interventions to enhance the revival strategies of the world economy. This paper examines the effectiveness of policy intervention of the State Government of Kerala in India in mitigating the risks caused by the pandemic. The policy effectiveness is evaluated by analyzing the data collected from a sample of 300 beneficiaries with the help of descriptive statistics, ordered probit (OP) model, and semi nonparametric extended OP (SNEOP) model. Our results are assertive with the fact that state policies are effective in reviving the crisis‐hit economy as they have primarily helped low‐income groups and other marginalized communities. The majority of BPL families, self‐help group members, and social security beneficiaries rated government policies as highly or fairly effective. Though the policies are found to be highly effective among those who have suffered income loss, the study does not find sufficient evidence to believe that the government interventions are effective in helping those who have lost their jobs. The level of effectiveness is inversely related to age, education, and family size. Our results suggest that an extensive fiscal package is required to help people recover from the crisis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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17. Affective Activism and Digital Archiving: Relief Work and Migrant Workers during the Covid‐19 Lockdown in India.
- Author
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Sriraman, Tarangini
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MIGRANT labor ,DIGITAL libraries ,AFFECT (Psychology) ,ACTIVISM ,COVID-19 ,STAY-at-home orders - Abstract
This article traces what I term the affective activism of volunteers, civil society organizations, and lorry drivers engaged in relief work to assist stranded migrant workers wanting to travel home during the first wave of the coronavirus pandemic and national lockdown in India. I define affective activism as an archival practice that is driven by relief figures' affects of fear, anger, and aspirations—in this instance, toward their legal and administrative accountability to funders. Drawing on my ethnographic work in a relief network and using independent interviews I conducted, this article critically compares two modalities of digital archiving conducted by relief figures: collecting migrant workers' Aadhaar—unique biometric number identifiers issued to Indians—and digitally archiving their relief efforts through videos, voice‐notes, and WhatsApp Messenger screenshots. I argue that relief figures expressed their anxieties in the form of talismanic beliefs that records of Aadhaar and their material infrastructure would keep safe the migrant workers they were trying to help. Alternately, and sometimes, concomitantly, they performatively deployed Whatsapp artifacts to support their accountability in the face of bureaucratic and political specters. Both forms highlight the desire of relief figures to exceed paper forms and state practices in their archival impulses. [affective activism, India relief work, Covid‐19 lockdown, migrant workers, digital archiving, and visual politics] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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18. "Neither it had social work components nor experiential": Students' perspectives of online fieldwork practice during COVID‐19 in India.
- Author
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Negi, Dandub Palzor and E P, Abdul Azeez
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STUDENT attitudes ,ETHICAL problems ,SOCIAL services ,SOCIAL work students ,COVID-19 ,COVID-19 pandemic ,EXPERIENTIAL learning - Abstract
This paper explores social work students' perspectives of online fieldwork practice that emerged due to sudden disruption in field placement as a result of the outbreak of COVID‐19 in India. We have recruited and interviewed 32 Master's students from five north‐Indian universities to participate in the research. The study's findings highlight ill‐equipped agencies lacking social work components in online/virtual field placement. Also, ethical dilemmas in working virtually, disconnectedness from the field, and superficial supervision were experienced by the students. The study result implies the urgent need to develop and innovate a pedagogical approach to deal with uncertainties and crises like the COVID‐19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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19. Lies, damned lies, and statistics: The uncertainty over COVID‐19 numbers in India.
- Author
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Mahasuar, Kiran
- Subjects
BENFORD'S law (Statistics) ,DATA libraries ,SARS-CoV-2 ,COVID-19 ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
This paper intends to ascertain the veracity of reported data on deaths and testing pertaining to the novel coronavirus in India. We use a widely used forensic audit technique called Benford's law to analyze the data, and our findings suggest anomalies in the reported numbers and the reported data for most of the states do not adhere to the Benford distribution. The implications of these findings are manifold, especially on the trajectory of policy‐making, vaccination strategy, and preparedness for future waves and new variants. We strongly argue for the need for a robust data collection and reporting mechanism, creating a central data repository, and instituting a data‐driven policy framework as key steps in the process management bulwark for managing such future pandemics and other events concerning public health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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20. Life and Death Decisions and COVID‐19: Investigating and Modeling the Effect of Framing, Experience, and Context on Preference Reversals in the Asian Disease Problem.
- Author
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Uttrani, Shashank, Sharma, Neha, and Dutt, Varun
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FRAMES (Social sciences) ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,COVID-19 ,JUDGMENT (Psychology) ,DECISION making - Abstract
Prior research in judgment and decision making (JDM) has investigated the effect of problem framing on human preferences. Furthermore, research in JDM documented the absence of such reversal of preferences when making decisions from experience. However, little is known about the effect of context on preferences under the combined influence of problem framing and problem format. Also, little is known about how cognitive models would account for human choices in different problem frames and types (general/specific) in the experience format. One of the primary objectives of this research is to investigate the presence of preference reversals under the influence of problem framing (gain/loss), problem format (experience/description), and problem type (general/specific). Another objective of this research is to develop cognitive models to account for human choices across different problem frames and types in the experience format. A total of 320 participants from India were randomly assigned to one of eight between‐subjects conditions that differed in problem frame, format, and type. Results revealed preference reversals in the description condition; however, they were absent in the experience condition. Moreover, preference reversals were less pronounced in the general problem framing compared to the specific problem framing. Furthermore, specific problems influenced risk‐seeking behavior among participants. We developed cognitive and heuristics models using instance‐based learning theory and natural mean heuristic. Results reveal models' dependency on recent and frequent observations during information sampling. These experience‐based cognitive models could help build artificial intelligence models with fewer preference reversals. This paper focuses on investigating the presence of preference reversals under the influence of problem framing (gain/loss), problem format (experience/description), and problem type (general/specific). Furthermore, Uttrani et al. develop cognitive models using instance‐based learning theory and natural mean heuristic to account for human choices across different problem frames and types in the experience format. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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21. Psychosocial response to COVID‐19 pandemic in India: Helpline counsellors' experiences and perspectives.
- Author
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Joshi, Aparna, Tammana, Sindhura, Babre, Tanuja, and Kallianpur, Ritika
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COUNSELORS ,MENTAL health ,PSYCHOTHERAPIST attitudes ,INTERVIEWING ,STAY-at-home orders ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,SOCIAL classes - Abstract
The COVID‐19 pandemic presents a threat to physical and psychosocial health of individuals. In lieu of the subsequent lockdown and containment measures, helpline counselling becomes a viable method of accessing psychosocial services during the pandemic. The present paper describes experiences of counsellors working with a special COVID‐19 counselling helpline initiated by iCALL, a national‐level technology‐assisted counselling service of the Tata Institute of Social Sciences, India, which aims to address the psychosocial impact of the pandemic and the lockdown. The paper is based on two focus group interviews held with 11 counsellors during the initial two months of the helpline's functioning. Findings of the study highlight the diverse profile of the callers, with individuals belonging to different strata of society and to marginalised communities. The nature of concerns presented by the callers were often a mix of psychological, relational and practical issues. The resultant distress emanated from an interplay of these factors with the relational contexts, their social locations and social structures the individuals were embedded in. This highlighted the need for conceptualising and responding from a psychosocial lens, whereby interventions involved traditional counselling approaches and strategies for addressing determinants of distress by connecting callers to required ground‐level resources. Counsellors' engagement with this process impacted their professional and personal selves, necessitating the need for structured and continuous training, supervision and support. At a larger level, the counsellors' narratives asserted the need for adopting a psychosocial paradigm for conceptualising and addressing mental health concerns in India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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22. Government transfers, COVID‐19 shock, and food insecurity: Evidence from rural households in India.
- Author
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Kumar, Anjani, Mishra, Ashok K., Saroj, Sunil, and Rashid, Shahidur
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FOOD security ,COVID-19 ,RURAL families ,POOR people ,HOUSEHOLDS ,NATIONAL school lunch program - Abstract
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) pandemic has decimated the lives and livelihoods of people worldwide. The impact of COVID‐19 has been especially devastating for low‐income families in rural areas of India. Soon after the nationwide lockdown was announced, food insecurity became pervasive in rural areas, as many families relied on daily wage work to fund necessities. By providing cash transfers and additional foodgrains, Indian policymakers acted swiftly to reduce the financial impact on family income and consumption. This paper investigates the factors affecting rural families' participation in the cash transfer program and the effect of government cash transfers on food insecurity. Results indicate that India's government cash transfer program decreased moderate food insecurity by 2.4% and severe food insecurity by about 0.92% [EconLit Citations: O12, I31, I32, I38]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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23. Covid‐19 and caste inequalities in India: The critical role of social identity in pandemic‐induced job losses.
- Author
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Deshpande, Ashwini and Ramachandran, Rajesh
- Subjects
GROUP identity ,LAYOFFS ,HEALTH equity ,STAY-at-home orders ,PANEL analysis - Abstract
Using panel data for the period between April 2019 and September 2021, this paper investigates how the Covid‐19 pandemic‐induced lockdowns imposed differential labor market shocks on different social identity groups. We find that while all caste groups lost jobs in the first 2 months of the lockdown, the job losses for lowest‐ranked caste are greater by factor of more than two. The data shows that caste gaps in employment outcomes remain sizeable, even when we compare groups within the same industry, occupations, or those who have completed secondary schooling. These findings suggest that caste is not merely a proxy for class, and identity‐based policies might be essential to overcoming these disparities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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24. Employment effects of an emergency assistance package for migrants displaced by COVID‐19 in India.
- Author
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Varshney, Deepak and Meenakshi, J. V.
- Subjects
ASSISTANCE in emergencies ,RETURN migrants ,COVID-19 ,PUBLIC works ,EMPLOYMENT ,HEALTH care rationing - Abstract
This paper examines the employment effects of an emergency assistance package by the Indian government, the Garib Kalyan Rozgar Abhiyaan that had the sole objective of providing employment to returning migrants. It was targeted to 116 districts that had seen returning migrants in excess of 25,000, was limited in duration to 4 months, and was directed at top‐up funding to public works and 25 other target sectors in rural areas. Using a sharp RD approach, we find that the intervention had substantive impacts on employment and in reducing rationing in public works and that it did so in a cost‐effective manner. In contrast to the widespread impression of a slow‐moving bureaucracy, these results point to an administrative machinery that was able to successfully implement this project within a relatively short period of time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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25. Do Child Marriage Programs Help Girls Weather Shocks Like COVID‐19? Evidence from the More Than Brides Alliance Intervention.
- Author
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Melnikas, Andrea J., Saul, Grace, Pandey, Neelanjana, Makino, Momoe, Amin, Sajeda, and Chau, Michelle
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CHILD marriage ,BRIDES ,COVID-19 ,TEENAGE girls ,WEATHER - Abstract
This paper contributes to the evidence base on the impact of the COVID‐19 on child marriage prevalence and on the protective potential of girl‐centred, community‐level interventions in buffering communities against aggregate shocks. Drawing on data from repeat cross‐sectional surveys completed with adolescent girls aged 12–19 in 609 villages in four states in India as a part of the More Than Brides Alliance impact evaluation, we examine whether the intervention appears to have impacted child marriage prevalence over its 5‐year implementation period, whether the onset of COVID‐19 affected ongoing trends in child marriage prevalence, and whether the intervention appeared to have buffered against increased child marriage risk resulting from the pandemic. Results show that significant differences emerged between treatment and control villages between midline and endline—and these differences were larger following the onset of COVID‐19—suggesting both that the treatment was successful in preventing child marriage and that the intervention had a protective effect. Results suggest that girl‐centred, community‐based interventions can help communities to weather environmental shocks and protect girls against potential increased child marriage risk during times of acute crisis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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26. COVID‐19 and the urban housing affordability – evidence from select Indian cities.
- Author
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Nagarjun, Kandachar B. and Sridhar, Kala Seetharam
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HOUSING ,CITIES & towns ,RESIDENTIAL real estate ,REAL estate sales ,HOME sales ,ECONOMIC recovery - Abstract
Copyright of Regional Science Policy & Practice is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2023
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27. Impact of operational fragility on stock returns: Lessons from COVID‐19 crisis.
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Bansal, Avijit, Gopalakrishnan, Balagopal, Jacob, Joshy, and Srivastava, Pranjal
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COVID-19 pandemic ,LOCATION data ,INDUSTRIAL location ,ENTERPRISE value - Abstract
We examine how the market valuation of firms varies on account of their operational fragility that makes them vulnerable to the COVID‐19 pandemic. Using the data on plant location that uniquely identifies the vulnerability of firms to operational disruptions, we find that firms with plants located in zones susceptible to higher infections earn significantly lower returns. For firms with high operational fragility, the marginal value of financial flexibility and operating flexibility is higher. The adverse impact of the operational fragility is lower for firms affiliated with the larger business groups. The paper identifies unique channels associated with the pandemic that impact firm value. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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28. The COVID‐19 pandemic: Narratives of informal women workers in Indian Punjab.
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Singh, Nadia and Kaur, Areet
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COVID-19 pandemic ,MATERNAL health services ,INFORMAL sector ,AUTONOMY (Economics) ,WOMEN'S employment ,HOUSEKEEPING - Abstract
The COVID‐19 crisis has translated into an unprecedented humanitarian crisis for the poor and marginalized groups in society. The countrywide lockdowns, quarantine measures, and mobility restrictions across 200 countries of the world have resulted in a host of negative manifestations for women. There have been unprecedented losses in the informal economy, which is dominated by women. Some scholars also contend that the pandemic will translate into heightened burden of unpaid domestic work, loss of economic autonomy and disruption to maternal health services. Despite these factors a gendered perspective is absent in the policy response to this crisis. It is against this background that the present paper employed a feminist intersectionality lens to conduct participatory field based research on the lived experiences of women in informal employment in Indian Punjab during the COVID‐19 crisis. The research unearthed the specific pathways through which existing socio‐economic inequities rooted in caste, class and occupational entities magnify the vulnerabilities experienced by women during such a health crisis. The research offers a contextualized framework for understanding the gendered impacts of the crisis. It also highlights the urgency of taking account of gender specific constraints during the health crisis so as to institute robust, effective and equitable policy interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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29. Feasibility of teledentistry in population groups: Introducing a matrix model for its assessment.
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Suresh, Lekshmi R. and Hegde, Amitha M.
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TELEDENTISTRY - Abstract
The COVID‐19 pandemic has seen a sudden increase in the demand for healthcare organizations to improve their utilization of digital platforms to supplement the reach of conventional healthcare services. In the wake of this crisis, dentistry is on the cusp of a major overhaul, promoting preventive practices and a rapid shift to teledentistry platforms. A random push to adapt to teledentistry platforms may cause the straining of available resources and manpower, especially in sectors involved in the care of vulnerable population groups like children, individuals with special needs and those in the low socioeconomic strata. It is thus advisable to make this transition systematically, beginning with an analysis of feasibility, done periodically, to maximize efficiency. Described in this article is a system to facilitate this transition by utilizing a matrix model, laying foundation for assessment of feasibility based on target population characteristics. It calls for the improvement of population characteristics to reduce strain on the healthcare sector using key indicators of the model, paired against potential barriers, and is described using a case study from the field. Key points: • The concept model described in this paper lays foundation for assessment of the feasibility for tele‐dentistry platforms based on population characteristics. • Key indicators for assessing feasibility and suggestions for improvement have been highlighted against the barriers in each component of the model categories. • Applicability of this model has been described using a case study from an integrated platform for children and individuals with special health care needs, in South India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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30. Association Between Air Pollution and COVID‐19 Pandemic: An Investigation in Mumbai, India.
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Chattopadhyay, Aparajita and Shaw, Subhojit
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COVID-19 pandemic ,AIR pollution ,COVID-19 ,SUSTAINABLE urban development ,AIR pollutants ,POLLUTION - Abstract
Spatial hot spots of COVID‐19 infections and fatalities are observed at places exposed to high levels of air pollution across many countries. This study empirically investigates the relationship between exposure to air pollutants that is, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide, and particulate matter (SO2, NO2, and PM10) and COVID‐19 infection at the smallest administrative level (ward) of Mumbai City in India. The paper explores two hypotheses: COVID‐19 infection is associated with air pollution; the pollutants act as determinants of COVID‐19 deaths. Kriging is used to assess the spatial variations of air quality using pollution data, while information on COVID‐19 are retrieved from the database of Mumbai municipality. Annual average of PM10 in Mumbai over the past 3 years is much higher than the WHO specified standard across all wards; further, suburbs are more exposed to SO2, and NO2 pollution. Bivariate local indicator of spatial autocorrelation finds significant positive relation between pollution and COVID‐19 infected cases in certain suburban wards. Spatial Auto Regressive models suggest that COVID‐19 death in Mumbai is distinctly associated with higher exposure to NO2, population density and number of waste water drains. If specific pollutants along with other factors play considerable role in COVID‐19 infection, it has strong implications for any mitigation strategy development with an objective to curtail the spreading of the respiratory disease. These findings, first of its kind in India, could prove to be significant pointers toward disease alleviation and better urban living. Plain Language Summary: The study investigates the relationship between exposure to pollutants (local SO2, NO2, and PM10) and COVID‐19 (cases and deaths) in Mumbai. It also explains whether pollutants act as determinants of COVID‐19 deaths when other factors like population density, health infrastructure, number of slums, waste water drains and roads are controlled through spatial modelling. PM10 concentration is much above the WHO specified standard across Mumbai. Overall, people living in the suburbs of Mumbai are at a higher risk of respiratory morbidity. High exposure to specific pollutants (SO2, NO2, and PM10) and high‐presence of COVID‐19 cases are well established in certain wards in the suburban parts of the city. Further, exposure to NO2 and COVID‐19 deaths reveals strong linkages in Mumbai. Association of COVID‐19 and environmental pollution should be considered as a measure of an integrated approach in sustainable development as it has strong implications for mitigation strategies related to the novel virus. Key Points: Significant association between COVID‐19 infection with SO2, NO2, and PM10 reveals spatial hot spots in MumbaiWith increase in NO2 there is substantial increase in COVID‐19 deaths in MumbaiAir quality is an important element to address COVID‐19 management and sustainable urban development [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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31. Frugal innovation in a crisis: the digital fabrication maker response to COVID‐19.
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Corsini, Lucia, Dammicco, Valeria, and Moultrie, James
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RAPID prototyping ,COVID-19 ,LOW-income countries ,HIGH-income countries ,MIDDLE-income countries ,PLANT capacity - Abstract
The rapid spread of COVID‐19 has led to a global shortfall in essential items, turning many countries into resource‐constrained environments. In response, an unprecedented number of do‐it‐yourself hobbyists (i.e. makers) have started to use digital fabrication tools to produce critical items. These bottom‐up communities are mobilising as part of a global movement to produce innovative solutions to much‐needed items, such as face masks, face shields and ventilators. As these individuals tackle widespread resource constraints, the conceptual lens of frugal innovation becomes highly relevant to study how these solutions developed. Frugal innovation is a type of resource‐constrained innovation that refers to the practice of doing more with less, for more people. In this study, we present two instrumental case studies of maker projects that use digital fabrication to tackle COVID‐19. The first case study is from Italy (a High Income Country) and the second is from India (a Lower Middle Income Country). We analyse the frugality of these cases and highlight their similar approaches. In doing so, we suggest that current theories of frugal innovation can be expanded to new geographical and technological contexts. We put forward that frugal innovation is an important strategy in crisis response beyond emerging markets and that digital fabrication can be considered as an important frugal innovation enabler, both in its ability to produce frugal solutions and to support distributed networks of innovation actors. This study advances knowledge on how frugal innovation unfolds in the Maker movement. It is among one of the first studies to connect the domains of makers and frugal innovation, and the paper concludes by identifying several promising areas for further research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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32. COVID‐19, Government Transfer Payments, and Investment Decisions in Farming Business: Evidence from Northern India.
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Varshney, Deepak, Kumar, Anjani, Mishra, Ashok K., Rashid, Shahidur, and Joshi, Pramod K.
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TRANSFER payments ,COVID-19 pandemic ,COVID-19 ,INVESTMENTS ,FARMS - Abstract
Although the COVID‐19 pandemic resulted in about a 24% decline in India's GDP during the April–June 2020 quarter, the nation's agricultural sector, somewhat surprisingly, seems to have done remarkably well. This paper examines whether the public transfer program Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Yojana (PMGKY), announced immediately after the lockdown, benefited farmers in dealing with the COVID shock. Overall, 95% of the smallholders received support from at least one of PMGKY's four components. Direct cash transfers had significantly more impact than in‐kind transfer schemes. The result shows that farmers receiving cash transfers under PM‐KISAN, one component of PMGKY, were more likely to invest in buying seeds. In contrast, farmers receiving cash transfers under PM‐UY, another piece of PMGKY, were more likely to invest in fertilizer and pesticides. Finally, smallholders who received benefits from all four components of PMGKY were more likely to invest in purchasing seeds, fertilizer, and pesticides. Findings suggest the fungibility of public cash transfers from the recent PMGKY scheme is significant in alleviating credit constraints and increasing future investments in modern inputs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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33. Economic Impacts of the COVID−19 Lockdown in a Remittance‐Dependent Region.
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Gupta, Anubhab, Zhu, Heng, Doan, Miki Khanh, Michuda, Aleksandr, and Majumder, Binoy
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ECONOMIC impact ,INTEREST rates ,COVID-19 pandemic ,STAY-at-home orders ,REMITTANCES - Abstract
The economic impacts of COVID‐19 lockdowns on poor and vulnerable households living in rural areas of developing countries are not well understood due to a lack of detailed micro‐survey data at the household level. Utilizing weekly financial transaction data collected from households residing in a rural region of India, we estimate the impacts of India's COVID‐19 lockdown on household income, food security, welfare, and access to local loan markets. A large portion of households living in our study region is reliant on remittances from migrants to sustain their livelihoods. Our analysis reveals that in the month immediately after India's lockdown announcement, weekly household local income fell by INR 1,022 (US$ 13.5), an 88% drop compared to the long‐term average with another 63% reduction in remittance. In response to the massive loss in earnings, households substantially reduced meal portions and consumed fewer food items. Impacts were heterogeneous; households in lower income quantiles lost a higher percentage of their income and expenditures, but government food aid slightly mitigated the negative impacts. We also find an increase in the effective interest rate of local borrowing in cash and a higher demand for in‐kind loans, which are likely to have an adverse effect on households who rely on such services. The results from this paper have immediate relevance to policymakers considering additional lockdowns as the COVID‐19 pandemic resurges around the globe and to governments thinking about responses to future pandemics that may occur. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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34. COVID‐19 and Supply Chain Disruption: Evidence from Food Markets in India†.
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Mahajan, Kanika and Tomar, Shekhar
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SUPPLY chain disruptions ,FOOD marketing ,FOOD supply ,SUPPLY chains - Abstract
This paper looks at the disruption in food supply chains due to COVID‐19 induced economic shutdown in India. We use a novel dataset from one of the largest online grocery retailers to look at the impact on product stockouts and prices. We find that product availability falls by 10% for vegetables, fruits, and edible oils, but there is a minimal impact on their prices. On the farm‐gate side, it is matched by a 20% fall in quantity arrivals of vegetables and fruits. We then show that supply chain disruption is the main driver behind this fall. We compute the distance to production zones from our retail centers and find that the fall in product availability and quantity arrivals is larger for items that are cultivated or manufactured farther from the final point of sale. Our results show that long‐distance food supply chains have been hit the hardest during the current pandemic with welfare consequences for urban consumers and farmers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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35. Preventing COVID‐19 Amid Public Health and Urban Planning Failures in Slums of Indian Cities.
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Patel, Amit
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URBAN health ,COVID-19 ,SLUMS ,SOCIAL distancing - Abstract
The COVID‐19 pandemic has brought renewed attention to the lack of urban planning and its public health implications in developing countries. Slum communities face the dual challenges of chronically poor residential environments and the acute effects of a pandemic and the preventive measures that follow. In this paper, I assess the effectiveness and implications of social distancing, frequent handwashing, and lockdown in the context of slums in Indian cities, where overcrowding, lack of access to water and sanitation, and dependence on daily wages for sustenance and livelihood are common. Using data from multiple sources, I demonstrate that not only will these measures be hard to achieve in slums in the short term due to specific characteristics of these habitats, but they will bring new challenges in the long term due to disproportionate impacts on the urban poor. Lessons learned from this pandemic will require us to rethink public health responses and urban planning practices that could better prepare our cities for future pandemics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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36. Smart secretion management to protect nurses from COVID19 and other infectious diseases.
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Saseedharan, Sanjith, Karanam, Roopa, Kadam, Vaijayanti, and Shirsekar, Suvarna
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OCCUPATIONAL disease prevention ,CROSS infection prevention ,ENDOTRACHEAL suctioning ,INTENSIVE care units ,PILOT projects ,USER-centered system design ,MUCUS ,COVID-19 ,INTENSIVE care nursing ,SECRETION ,ORAL hygiene ,NURSING ,WORK ,MEDICAL suction ,AUTOANALYZERS ,SALIVA ,TERTIARY care ,ACQUISITION of data ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,MEDICAL protocols ,SURVEYS ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,HOSPITAL nursing staff ,MEDICAL records ,GLOVES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: COVID‐19 has been linked to over 40 million infections and 1.1 million deaths in 210 countries as of October 19, 2020. This highly contagious communicable disease has put not only infected individuals but other patients and frontline workers like nurses at risk in hospitals, especially in Intensive Care units (ICUs). There is a need for minimizing patient contact, improving hand hygiene practices, and optimizing healthcare provider time, especially nurses. Globally it is estimated that nearly a million health care providers have been infected with COVID‐19 as of the end of October 2020. Methods: This retrospective service evaluation documents the experience of health care providers in a COVID‐19 ICU in India that was used to implement new protocols for secretion management and oral hygiene. Patient chart information and staff feedback were utilized. Intervention: This pilot study captures the practical benefits of using VAPCare, an automated, closed‐loop system for oral secretion removal. Results: Six patients were included in this small‐scale study; three patients following the current standard of care for suctioning and oral hygiene and three receiving the new VAPCare and Lumen device protocol. With the new device protocol, the number of infected secretion interactions by a nurse was 50% lower, and nursing time spent on oral hygiene and secretion management 70% less than seen with the current standard of care. The number of disposable gloves used with VAPCare and Lumen was reduced by over 50%. All 10 nurses and six doctors gave positive feedback on device usage. The department recommended updating protocols to prioritize the use of the new secretion management system for patients with COVID19 and other highly contagious conditions. Conclusion: The findings are an early indication that using VAPCare for patients could help protect infected patients, other ICU patients, and health care workers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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37. A simple macro‐model of COVID‐19 with special reference to India.
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COVID-19 ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,DYNAMICAL systems ,ECONOMIC activity - Abstract
Motivated by the prevailing severe situation in India, we extend the SIR(S) model of infectious diseases to incorporate demand dynamics and its interaction with COVID‐19 spread. We argue that, on one hand, the spread of COVID‐19 creates panic among consumers and firms and negatively affects economic activity. On the other hand, economic activity intensifies the spread of the infection. Initially assuming that recovered individuals do not develop antibodies and become susceptible again, we capture the interaction between economic activity and the spread of the disease in a two‐dimensional dynamical system. We show that a large fiscal expansion combined with measures to boost community health and improve the health sector's capacity to provide critical care can simultaneously improve the economy and control the spread of the disease. Finally, assuming that only a fraction of recovered individuals become susceptible to contracting the diseases again, we obtain richer dynamics in a three‐dimensional dynamical system. This paper also highlights the important role of infection rates and the recovery rate in determining the uniqueness and the stability properties of steady state. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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38. Where is my home?: Gendered precarity and the experience of COVID‐19 among women migrant workers from Delhi and National Capital Region, India.
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Arora, Shubhda and Majumder, Mrinmoy
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WOMEN migrant labor ,CAPITAL cities ,COVID-19 pandemic ,MIGRANT labor ,PRECARITY ,SOCIAL distancing ,PRECARIOUS employment - Abstract
With growing interest in the lives of individuals and communities during the COVID‐19 pandemic, there is consensus among scholars, academicians, and policy makers that the pandemic has had unequal impacts on different sections of the society. The dominant idea that “we are in this together” needs to be critically unpacked to understand the differential impact of the same pandemic on people with varied vulnerabilities. The concept of “intersectional vulnerability” has been key to understanding the unequal distribution of the pandemic risk. Using a gendered intersectional lens, this paper aims to understand the lived experiences of migrant women workers during the pandemic and their narratives of gendered inequality. Through a narrative study in Delhi and the National Capital Region (NCR), India, from May to October 2020, this study brings out stories of precarity faced by five migrant women while battling the social, psychological, and economic effects of the pandemic. Loss of livelihood, home, savings, and prospects of a better future shape the narratives of these women. The pandemic exacerbated the already precarious positions of these women by creating a situation where—(a) patriarchal structures were further reinforced, and (b) losing gender solidarity and companionship through lockdown and social distancing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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39. Implementation of 'One Health' approach in Kerala state, India – A systematic review.
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Suhail, Mohammed K., Hannis, Dorothy, Armstrong, Alan, and Rhodes, Alan
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ZOONOSES ,Q fever ,COVID-19 - Abstract
With humans, animals and the environment being as interconnected as they are, the science describing their interactions needs to cut across disciplinary boundaries. Systems research at the interface between the three goes by several names, such as 'Eco‐Health' and 'Planetary Health', each with a varied focus, but the concept of 'One Health' (OH) has stood out as the most popular one. COVID‐19 has reiterated the importance of OH in response to health challenges. This review aimed to assess the OH approach integration and implementation level in Kerala state, India, in the context of emerging zoonotic diseases. A systematic literature review was conducted by searching for relevant articles with specific keywords across six electronic databases. This involved screening the initial hits for titles and abstracts, then systematic sorting to identify the ones that met the criteria, followed by more thorough scrutiny to finally shortlist the six studies to be included in the review. We found that OH in Kerala has made good progress, as evident from a few recent examples, but has a long way to go with significant challenges. In line with the study's aim, identifying and analysing what is already done, what is missing and what needs to be done can have wider implications for future OH implementation. Relevant threats and opportunities were identified, with lessons for Kerala and India and broader applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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40. Transmissibility of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 among household contacts of coronavirus disease 2019‐positive patients: A community‐based study in India.
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Sreedevi, Aswathy, Mohammad, Ahmad, Satheesh, Mini, Ushakumari, Anuja, Kumar, Anil, Raveendran, Geetha, Narayankutty, Saritha, Gopakumar, Soumya, Rahman, Anisur, David, Sachin, Mathew, Minu Maria, and Nair, Prem
- Subjects
SARS-CoV-2 ,COVID-19 ,REVERSE transcriptase polymerase chain reaction - Abstract
Background: This study identified the risk factors for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 infection among household contacts of index patients and determined the incubation period (IP), serial interval, and estimates of secondary infection rate in Kerala, India. Methods: We conducted a cohort study in three districts of Kerala among the inhabitants of households of reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction‐positive coronavirus disease 2019 patients between January and July 2021. About 147 index patients and 362 household contacts were followed up for 28 days to determine reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction positivity and the presence of total antibodies against SARS‐CoV‐2 on days 1, 7, 14, and 28. Results: The mean IP, serial interval, and generation time were 1.6, 3, and 3.9 days, respectively. The secondary infection rate at 14 days was 43.0%. According to multivariable regression analysis persons who worked outside the home were protected (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 0.45; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.24–0.85), whereas those who had kissed the coronavirus disease 2019‐positive patients during illness were more than twice at risk of infection (aOR, 2.23; 95% CI, 1.01–5.2) than those who had not kissed the patients. Sharing a toilet with the index patient increased the risk by more than twice (aOR, 2.5; 95% CI, 1.42–4.64) than not sharing a toilet. However, the contacts who reported using masks (aOR, 2.5; 95% CI, 1.4–4.4) were at a higher risk of infection in household settings. Conclusions: Household settings have a high secondary infection rate and the changing transmissibility dynamics such as IP, serial interval should be considered in the prevention and control of SARS‐CoV‐2. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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41. The experiences of nurses during the COVID‐19 crisis in India and the role of the state: A qualitative analysis.
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Mahapatro, Meerambika and Prasad, Moksh M.
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PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout ,OCCUPATIONAL achievement ,NURSES' attitudes ,INTERVIEWING ,PSYCHOLOGY of nurses ,EXPERIENCE ,QUALITATIVE research ,SOCIAL isolation ,EMPLOYEES' workload ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,THEMATIC analysis ,STATISTICAL sampling ,PERSONAL protective equipment ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience - Abstract
Objectives: The study documents the lived experience of nurses coping with the double burden of external demands and internal stressors while providing care during the COVID‐19 pandemic in India. Methods: This qualitative study interviewed 18 female nurses who worked in the COVID wards of a major hospital in India. The one‐on‐one telephonic interviews were conducted with respondents based on three broad open‐ended questions. Thematic analysis was conducted. Results: Three themes were identified: (i) external demands such as availability, utilization, and management of resources; (ii) internal psychological stressors, such as emotional exhaustion, moral anguish, and social isolation; and (iii) promotive factors such as the roles of the state and society, and of patients and attendants Conclusions: Findings suggest that despite limited resources and facilities, nurses ploughed through the pandemic with their resilience and the state's and society's promotive factors. To improve health care delivery in this crisis, the role of the state and healthcare system has become important to prevent the workforce from crumbling. The sustained attention of the state and society is required to reinstate motivation among nurses by raising the collective value of their contribution and capability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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42. The multifaceted challenges of teaching from home: A study of schoolteachers' well‐being during the COVID‐19 pandemic.
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Bhattacharya, Anindita and Tandon, Ankita
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COVID-19 pandemic ,WELL-being ,TEACHERS ,ONLINE education ,TELECOMMUTING ,HOUSEKEEPING - Abstract
This study examined perceived needs, well‐being, work/nonwork conflict and demands, and coping mechanisms among government and private schoolteachers in India while working from home during the COVID‐19 pandemic. We employed a mixed method design, collecting 161 quantitative responses using questionnaires and 121 qualitative responses using open‐ended questions. These were analyzed using inferential statistics and thematic analysis, respectively. Results highlight the negative impact of work/nonwork conflict on well‐being. The missing work‐home boundaries resulted in extended work hours, unorganized routines, and simultaneous work/nonwork demands. We describe the multifaceted nature of operational, pedagogical, and technological challenges faced by schoolteachers. We suggest psychological and operational resources and support mechanisms that can be developed at the family, school administration, and policy levels. Further, customized bundles of solutions are needed to address the variability in the challenges faced. Practitioner points: 1.During the COVID‐19 pandemic, schoolteachers experienced lower well‐being due to simultaneous work and household demands and challenges of transitioning to online teaching.2.Schoolteachers faced challenges on operational, pedagogical, and technological fronts, which remain relevant as online teaching continues to be adopted in education.3.Contextualized support mechanisms at family, school administration, and policy level need to be developed to support schoolteachers' well‐being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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43. Wastewater surveillance could serve as a pandemic early warning system for COVID‐19 and beyond.
- Author
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Gahlot, Pallavi, Alley, Kelly D., Arora, Sudipti, Das, Sukanya, Nag, Aditi, and Tyagi, Vinay Kumar
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SEWAGE ,COVID-19 ,WASTEWATER treatment ,DEVELOPING countries ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Wastewater‐based surveillance can be used as an early warning system to identify COVID‐19 outbreaks because the viral load can be observed in sewage before it is clinically verified. Wastewater surveillance of SARS‐CoV‐2 can trace the transmission dynamics of infection in communities when using the scale of a wastewater diversion and treatment system. Using this early detection method can help protect human health and mitigate socio‐economic losses. It can help quantify the epidemiological data of a given population in real‐time and circumvent the need for other epidemiological indicators. There are challenges in using this technique in areas with underdeveloped sewerage infrastructure. It is especially the case in developing nations where uniform protocols for viral detection are lacking, and wastewater is heterogeneous because of environmental and operational conditions. This article explains the need for and importance of wastewater‐based surveillance for SARS‐CoV‐2. It lays out the most recent methodological approaches for detecting SARS‐CoV‐2 in municipal wastewater and outlines the main challenges associated with wastewater‐based epidemiology (WBE). The article includes a case study of surveillance work across India to demonstrate how a developing nation manages research and locational challenges. The socio‐economic, ethical, and policy dimensions of WBE for SARS‐CoV‐2 are also discussed. This article is categorized under:Engineering Water > Water, Health, and SanitationEngineering Water > Sustainable Engineering of WaterEngineering Water > Methods [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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44. Artificial neural networks for prediction of COVID‐19 in India by using backpropagation.
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Manohar, Balakrishnama and Das, Raja
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COVID-19 ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PREDICTION models ,FORECASTING ,ARTIFICIAL neural networks - Abstract
The COVID‐19 pandemic has affected thousands of people around the world. In this study, we used artificial neural network (ANN) models to forecast the COVID‐19 outbreak for policymakers based on 1st January to 31st October 2021 of positive cases in India. In the confirmed cases of COVID‐19 in India, it's critical to use an estimating model with a high degree of accuracy to get a clear understanding of the situation. Two explicit mathematical prediction models were used in this work to anticipate the COVID‐19 epidemic in India. A Boltzmann Function‐based model and Beesham's prediction model are among these methods and also estimated using the advanced ANN‐BP models. The COVID‐19 information was partitioned into two sections: training and testing. The former was utilized for training the ANN‐BP models, and the latter was used to test them. The information examination uncovers critical day‐by‐day affirmed case changes, yet additionally unmistakable scopes of absolute affirmed cases revealed across the time span considered. The ANN‐BP model that takes into consideration the preceding 14‐days outperforms the others based on the archived results. In forecasting the COVID‐19 pandemic, this comparison provides the maximum incubation period, in India. Mean square error, and mean absolute percent error have been treated as the forecast model performs more accurately and gets good results. In view of the findings, the ANN‐BP model that considers the past 14‐days for the forecast is proposed to predict everyday affirmed cases, especially in India that have encountered the main pinnacle of the COVID‐19 outbreak. This work has not just demonstrated the relevance of the ANN‐BP techniques for the expectation of the COVID‐19 outbreak yet additionally showed that considering the incubation time of COVID‐19 in forecast models might produce more accurate assessments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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45. Driving citizen engagement through Twitter: The case of COVID‐19 vaccination drive in India.
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Annamalai, Balamurugan, Chandrasekaran, Shabana, and Pathak, Atul Arun
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COVID-19 vaccines ,CRISIS communication ,COVID-19 pandemic ,EXECUTIVE departments ,INFORMATION dissemination ,ANXIETY - Abstract
Effective crisis communication is essential to efficiently handle the uncertainty and anxiousness of citizens during the COVID‐19 crisis. Government Twitter handles are an excellent platform for faster information dissemination and engaging citizens. While most government ministries actively use Twitter, limited attention is given to its modus operandi. Using data retrieved from the official Twitter handle of 'The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare' (MOHFW) of India, the current study examines the effect of the content characteristics, including content type and media type, on citizen engagement measured as tweet likes and retweets. The findings are based on 3742 tweets from MOHFW, recording more than 4.06 million likes and 1.23 million retweets over the initial six months of the largest COVID‐19 vaccination drive. Results show that content‐sharing guidance for stakeholders gained the maximum engagement, while the latest news about the COVID‐19 crisis resulted in the least engagement. Photos gained maximum engagement, while statuses resulted in the least engagement. The results illuminate the textual features of the government's Twitter communication and will enable policymakers to manage their social media content strategy diligently. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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46. The politics of gifts and reciprocity in South–South Cooperation: The case of India's Covid‐19 diplomacy.
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Venkatachalam, Meera, Nielsen, Kenneth Bo, and Modi, Renu
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RECIPROCITY (Psychology) ,CAPITAL movements ,COVID-19 ,DIPLOMACY ,COOPERATION - Abstract
Development economists have often argued that South–South flows of capital and aid are devoid of the conditionalities and hierarchies that define North–South flows of the same. Maussians and neo‐Maussians maintain that gifting—which allows for the ethos of reciprocity—leads to the formation of more equal international partnerships. This article focusses on India's development diplomacy. We unpack Indian cultural notions of 'gifting', which do not allow for imaginings of reciprocity, and show how 'the gift' has been strategically employed by Indian actors as a tool of state‐making to forge relations of hierarchy and dependence globally. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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47. Mothering load: Underlying realities of professionally engaged Indian mothers during a global crisis.
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Mazumdar, Ketoki, Parekh, Sneha, and Sen, Isha
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MOTHERS ,COVID-19 pandemic ,HOUSEKEEPING ,UNPAID labor ,CHILD care ,WORKING mothers - Abstract
The current global crisis has had a significant impact on professionally engaged mothers and the proliferation of the invisible nature of the work that they are engaged in on a daily basis. Several research studies have indicated how mothers seem to have been particularly affected. Mothers experienced an exacerbation in their domestic household and child‐care responsibilities due to the absence of househelp and other child care arrangements while balancing their professional careers. These challenges crystallized the existing gender inequalities and the gendered nature of parenting. Using a feminist lens, this study explores the experiences of mothering load during COVID‐19 against the backdrop of urban India. A total of two themes and six sub‐themes were identified through the process of thematic analysis—Triad of work included increased care work, increased formal work, and increased worry work and Mothering experiences: Burdens and Biases included the lack of support, parental role overload, and gendered nature of parenting. This study adds to the limited empirical evidence of working mothers in India while straddling the worlds of feminism and mental health activism. Findings indicate the need to explicitly highlight the invisibilized phenomena of unpaid care work, worry work, and the gendered nature of parenting that contribute to the larger experience of mothering load. The findings also point toward acknowledging the importance of maternal mental health and the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 5 to establish and enforce stronger policies around recognizing and appreciating unpaid care and domestic work to promote gender equality and empowering women at all levels. This may be enacted through the encouragement of shared responsibilities within the household and family units as contextually feasible and through the development of appropriate infrastructure, social protection policies, and the delivery of public services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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48. Assimilation of aircraft observations over the Indian monsoon region: Investigation of the effects of COVID‐19 on a reanalysis.
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Rani, S. Indira, Jangid, Buddhi Prakash, Francis, Timmy, Sharma, Priti, George, Gibies, Kumar, Sumit, Thota, Mohan S., George, John P., Nath, Sankar, Das Gupta, Munmun, and Mitra, Ashis Kumar
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CYCLONES ,LONG-range weather forecasting ,MONSOONS ,TROPOSPHERIC circulation ,CYCLONE tracking ,COVID-19 - Abstract
Since March 2020, the COVID‐19 pandemic has significantly reduced the availability of global aircraft‐based observations (ABOs), which has been restored later in 2021. This study focuses on the impact of ABOs on a regional reanalysis. Indian Monsoon Data Assimilation and Analysis (IMDAA) is a regional reanalysis for a period from 1979 to 2020 (originally up to 2018) over India and surrounding regions produced at the National Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecasting (NCMRWF), India, in collaboration with the UK Met Office. A comparison of the impact of ABOs on other conventional and satellite observations assimilated in the NCMRWF global model and IMDAA during 2019 and 2020 revealed the importance of ABOs, particularly in IMDAA, since it did not assimilate the latest satellite data as the IMDAA system was frozen in October 2016. A data denial experiment that removes all the ABOs from the IMDAA assimilation system for a period from March to November 2019 is designed. The results from the IMDAA reanalysis run, which assimilates ABOs during the same period, are compared with the data denial experiment. Assimilation of ABOs strengthened the upper tropospheric circulation, the Tropical Easterly Jet (TEJ), during the Indian summer monsoon compared to the data denial experiment. Analysis of the features of two cyclones that developed over the North Indian Ocean during the study period revealed that ABO assimilation played a key role in simulating the track and intensity of these cyclones when they were in the 'severe' category. Since the sample is small, more cyclone cases need to be analysed to consolidate the result. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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49. Effect of COVID‐19 Lockdown on the Profitability of Firms in India*.
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Jain, Ritika and Kumar, Rajnish
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COVID-19 pandemic ,FINANCIAL statements ,STAY-at-home orders ,PROFITABILITY ,COVID-19 - Abstract
We examine the effect of COVID‐19‐induced lockdown on the profitability of listed firms in India. We use quarterly income statement of 4168 listed firms for the period between April–June 2020 quarter and April–June 2022 quarter and compare their financial data with previous quarters (2015–2019). Using a difference‐in‐difference estimation framework and various profitability measures, we find that the COVID‐19 lockdown has reduced profits by around 15 per cent for listed firms in India. Our results are robust to various robustness tests and alternate specifications. We find evidence of firms losing revenues more than expenses, thus leading to decline in profits. The main effect is conditioned by firm‐specific factors. Specifically, firms that are smaller, older, unlisted and that do not belong to any group witnessed larger decline in profitability due to lockdown. Additionally, the effect of lockdown is more pronounced in areas that had lower mobility and higher COVID‐19 spread. These results underscore the importance of institutional factors and pre‐existing firm characteristics in conditioning the impact of lockdown on firm profitability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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50. Effect of testing and social distancing measures on COVID‐19 deaths in India: Role of pre‐existing socio‐economic factors.
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Jain, Ritika and Chatterjee, Tirtha
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SOCIAL distancing ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,CONTACT tracing ,MEDICAL quality control ,COVID-19 - Abstract
We examine the effect of testing and social distancing measures on the severity of COVID19 across Indian states during the 68th day nationwide lockdown period. We also explore whether pre‐existing socio‐economic factors such as quality of health care and the ability to practice social distancing influences the effect of these policy measures across states. Using daily level data between April 1 and May 31 for 18 of the major states, we find that both testing and social distancing have a negative effect on COVID‐19 fatalities in India. Further, testing is more helpful in reducing CFR for states with lower per capita health expenditure and weaker medical infrastructure. This highlights how ramping up testing can aid states that have a weak health care system through the detection of infection, contact tracing and isolation. In contrast, social distancing measures are more effective in states that are less populous and have lesser people dwelling in single‐room houses. Our results confirm the role of pre‐existing institutional factors in shaping the effect of policy actions on health outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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