BMJ Global Health (Nov 2020)

Combating the COVID-19 pandemic in a resource-constrained setting: insights from initial response in India

  • Rabbanie Tariq Wani,
  • Paragkumar Dhirajlal Chavda,
  • Siddharudha Shivalli,
  • Mohan Bairwa,
  • Madhur Verma,
  • Pranab Chatterjee,
  • Nitika Sharma,
  • Sabyasachi Behera,
  • Praveen Kulkarni,
  • Archisman Mohapatra,
  • Balaji Ramraj,
  • Arvind Kumar Singh,
  • Manish Kumar Singh,
  • Ravi Rohilla,
  • Bharti Chawla,
  • Sumit Chawla,
  • Rashmi Agarwalla,
  • Shubhashri Sudhiendra Jahagirdar,
  • Madan Mohan Majhi,
  • Harshal Ramesh Salve,
  • Pallavi Shukla,
  • Kapil Yadav,
  • Ramadass Sathiyamoorthy,
  • Kaushik Sarkar,
  • Soumya Swaroop Sahoo,
  • Shamshad Ahmad,
  • Dewesh Kumar,
  • Anirban Chatterjee,
  • Gaihemlung Pamei,
  • Hariom Kumar Solanki,
  • Shashanka Shekhar Chakraborty,
  • Gitismita Naik,
  • M Mohan Kumar,
  • Chinnadurai Aravinda,
  • Shilpa Karir,
  • Jasmin Nilima Panda,
  • Jaya Singh Kshatri,
  • Smrutiranjan Nayak,
  • Sithun Kumar Patro,
  • Shib Sekhar Datta,
  • Nilanjana Ghosh,
  • Pritam Roy,
  • Shankar Reddy Dudala,
  • Rachana R Annadani,
  • Malatesh Undi,
  • Sudhir Prabhu,
  • Santosh K Yatnatti,
  • Rakesh N Pillai,
  • Antony Stanley,
  • Satyanarayana G Konda,
  • Kajal Davara,
  • Mihir Prafulbhai Rupani,
  • Anuj Mundra,
  • Akhil Dhanesh Goel,
  • Manoj Kumar Gupta

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2020-003416
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 11

Abstract

Read online

The low-and-middle-income country (LMIC) context is volatile, uncertain and resource-constrained. India, an LMIC, has put up a complex response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Using an analytic approach, we have described India’s response to combat the pandemic during the initial months (from 17 January to 20 April 2020). India issued travel advisories and implemented graded international border controls between January and March 2020. By early March, cases started to surge. States scaled up movement restrictions. On 25 March, India went into a nationwide lockdown to ramp up preparedness. The lockdown uncovered contextual vulnerabilities and stimulated countermeasures. India leveraged existing legal frameworks, institutional mechanisms and administrative provisions to respond to the pandemic. Nevertheless, the cross-sectoral impact of the initial combat was intense and is potentially long-lasting. The country could have further benefited from evidence-based policy and planning attuned to local needs and vulnerabilities. Experience from India offers insights to nations, especially LMICs, on the need to have contextualised pandemic response plans.