WE thank the government for putting in place some good and necessary measures to stem the spread of Covid-19. We recognise this is not a “lockdown”, as we can still move about but an intensifying of social distancing and restrictions on movement which are critical.

Our main enemy is no longer the coronavirus but irresponsible, ignorant and disbelieving people who are spreading the virus widely.

There are some things that people must do.

Cancel travel plans

Travelling enhances spread of the virus and damages measures the government has put in place. Going back to our kampung will only bring the virus to older people in the villages who are at higher risk. Please stop all salaams, cium tangan and hugging behaviour that is high risk. We need to be responsible to stay at home and only take excursions which are necessary. This does not mean that we cannot keep fit by walking in our neighbourhood or parks.

Stop panic buying and hoarding

Crowding supermarkets and shops in panic buying is a dangerous activity. There’s no need to stock up food as supplies will not run out. But panic buying brings together many people in a close group and defeats the purpose of social distancing. This is a high risk activity, and increases your chance to get the virus and should be avoided. Supermarkets must restrict the number of shoppers, enforce 1-2-metre social distancing and limit the amount of items sold to a family. Hoarding and buying excessively will mean that others will not get access to supplies in the short term.

Stop all meetings and groups

Remember that meeting in small, intimate groups may be more hazardous than large groups. No group size is safe. Stop planning or having any physical prayer meetings, small social gatherings, makan outings, group outings. Weddings should be cancelled or restricted to family members. Funerals should be limited to immediate family. Use social media and the internet to communicate and keep in touch. You can have virtual activities and parties. Even eating out should be limited to essential needs with maximum social distancing possible. We must learn from China that has transformed eating out (social-distancing-eating-out) and grown extensively safe takeaway and food delivery services.

We expect that the virus is spreading extensively in the community and we have thousands of cases. We can expect to start to see a wave of seriously ill persons in the next two to four weeks and a wave of deaths in the weeks following that.

For social distancing to work we must stop travelling and moving about and gathering.

This is the time to work together and support each other as a community

Support those affected financially

Now is the time to work together and share our resources with the poor or those who will be hard hit by the loss of daily paid jobs. There are many who will not be able to work at this time because their businesses are shutdown. Some are daily paid and others will be forced to take a leave of absence from work. Also remember the immigrants. While we wait for our government to introduce more subsidy systems, it is time for all Malaysians to rise to the challenge of supporting each other and sharing our wealth. I like the Canadian approach that is trying to move people from scaremongering to caremongering. I appeal to those with a technical capability to set up online support groups. We can identify those in our immediate communities who are in need or hard hit and then organise funding for them; what poor or daily paid people need at this time is cash.

Support those in the frontline

At this time there will be those who need to work, especially healthcare professionals but also other emergency services and those that maintain our essential goods supplies like groceries. Please remember them and see how we can support them. It is time for friends, neighbours and family to lend a hand to these individuals. They may need essential childcare or food deliveries. We should establish support systems that are coronavirus-safe. If they cannot work due to child or family care needs we will all suffer.

A plea to the rich, private hospitals and telcos

Finally a plea to those who are very rich. Kindly consider sharing with the community, your fellow Malaysians. Share with the poor and those who will be hard hit by job closures but also remember the public health services. Our public health services have been chronically underfunded for more than 30 years and are in a serious need of financial injection to develop intensive care services, to buy personal protective equipment, to buy essential monitoring equipment for ill patients, etc. Make large contributions to the Ministry of Health (MOH) that will be able to dramatically turn around this epidemic, as they are currently still very short of resources (despite what is said publicly). Also use all your business and friend contacts to enable us to get all the necessary items we need to deal with this epidemic, especially from China. We need to also support the many private general practitioners on the ground who lack the basic protective equipment including masks. If health professionals and the health service gets overwhelmed and crumbles then there will be no one to support us if we get ill.

To private hospitals I would say: this is not the time to make money. Charge the bare minimum rates (break-even) for specialist outpatient and in-patient care. It is time for the private sector to absorb much of the non-coronavirus healthcare needs to allow the government hospitals to concentrate on the huge wave of Covid-19 patients who are coming their way soon.

To the telecommunication companies in Malaysia, please consider doing what many responsible telcos have done overseas, that is to make all internet available and free to everyone. At this time effective communication is vital and it must not be hampered by payments. Children and university students at home will need good bandwidth to enable them to continue studying.

All of you rich Malaysians, private hospitals and telcos will win not just our goodwill but also our prayers and blessings, as your actions will save many lives. As Joey Wat, chief executive officer of Yum China Holdings, says in an recent interview with CNN on the coronavirus “Every great company has a soul inside. Of course we need to learn to make money, at the same time, in a moment like this, we need to learn how not to make money sometimes.”

The coronavirus shows us that we all are Malaysians, not divided by ethnic, religious, cultural or economic differences. We will sink or swim together as the virus does not differentiate between us. Time to show the virus that we are not our own enemy. Time to show the world that we have the discipline of the South Koreans in maintaining strict social distancing, the love of the Canadians to care for each other and courage of the Italians in the face of this adversity.

Our prayers to all Malaysians in this time and remember three phrases: social-distancing, social-distancing, social-distancing.

Datuk Dr Amar-Singh HSS is a senior consultant paediatrician. Comments: letters@thesundaily.com

Clickable Image
Clickable Image
Clickable Image