Let’s Not Forget Social Distancing Is a Terrible Idea for Many People

As many of us are painfully aware, social distancing is an impossibility for much of India (and a lot of other regions). Measures such as hand-washing, keeping oneself at home if symptomatic, working from home can be followed without any major life repercussions only by a tiny minority of the country – i.e. the socioeconomically privileged. This reality came through quite poignantly in a recent blog post by three Tamil Nadu-based physicians. These doctors (Vijay Gopichandran, Sudharshini Subramaniam, Vinod H. Krishnamoorthy) describe their interactions with a 50-year-old woman who came to them with fever, cough and breathlessness. These symptoms will make any healthcare professional today consider the possibility of the novel coronavirus infection. Hence, while the woman was put on appropriate treatment according to existing protocols, the doctors suggested some social distancing measures to her, just to be on the safe side.

This is the response they got:

“Doctor, what you are saying is not practical. Our house is a little hut and all four of us live in the same room. We have enough room just to lie down and sleep. Keeping a 1-metre distance is impossible. Three of us are women and it is not safe for women to sleep outside the house. There is also the threat of scorpions and snakes outside.”

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After describing the insuperable difficulties of social distancing and shutdowns in the Indian scenario, the doctors argue that “by creating a social shut down, and halting the spread of the virus, we will save lives, no doubt, but how many lives will we be harming in order to save those who may be killed by the coronavirus?” This is a very loaded ethical question. The doctors proposed one way out:

“If a vast majority (more than 80%) of people who get the coronavirus infection are going to make it safely then we might actually be smarter in allowing the virus to take its course, closely watching and intervening for anyone who might have a turn for the worse.”

Passengers wear masks in the wake of coronavirus pandemic, at Indira Gandhi International Airport, in New Delhi, March 16, 2020. Photo: PTI/Kamal Kishore

I honestly do not know if this proposal makes ethical and pragmatic sense. For now, let’s consider the basic idea at stake here: the idea of risk. Over the past few weeks, what everyone from governments to organisations to individuals has been reacting to – whether in terms of closing borders or cancelling events or hoarding supplies – is their own conceptions of the risks associated with the new virus, coupled with feasibility. For example, those who consider the risks to be high and can manage to work from home (or don’t have to worry too much about money), are indeed practising social distancing. When it comes to India’s poor and marginalized, one can imagine there are two principal risks they face: