HomeNewsOpinionCovid-19 pandemic | How China and Europe differ in tackling the crisis

Covid-19 pandemic | How China and Europe differ in tackling the crisis

At the moment the Chinese approach seems to be working. It is attractive to countries with relatively low infection numbers, limited global economic integration and inadequate medical infrastructure.

May 11, 2020 / 18:19 IST
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A nurse rests during a night shift at a hospital in Cremona, Italy, March 8, 2020 REUTERS
A nurse rests during a night shift at a hospital in Cremona, Italy, March 8, 2020 REUTERS

The World Health Organization (WHO) has declared Covid-19 as pandemic. Although the outbreak has somehow stabilised in China and South Korea, there has been a sudden spread of the disease across Europe, which has now become the ‘epicentre of the pandemic’.

Aiming at Europe, many countries, including India and the United States, have imposed comprehensive travel restrictions. As of March 15, about 39,000 cases were reported in the European Union (EU) and the United Kingdom with about 1,700 deaths. A significant number of cases in India have linkages to Europe, mainly Italy.

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It is not just Italy where more than 17,000 cases are reported but the numbers are increasing rapidly in Spain, France, Germany, the UK, Netherlands, Scandinavia and elsewhere. Although most world leaders are assuring their citizens that things are under control, many European leaders are relatively candid in their approach.

The EU and many European leaders maintain that many countries in Europe are just at the beginning of crisis. This include the European Commission President and leaders from Germany, France, Spain and the UK. They feel that a large number of citizens will be affected by the virus as it is not possible to stop it. The focus must be to protect vulnerable citizens and slowing down the spread so that health systems are not overwhelmed. They feel shutting borders at this stage may not be an appropriate response. The UK is relying on ‘herd immunity’ in which about 40 million British citizens need to become infected in order to build immunity in the society. Although the WHO has already questioned this theory, because of limited knowledge of the virus behaviour, it seems some other European countries may be following somewhat similar strategies.