Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Sindh Institue of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences (SIOVS), Sindh, Pakistan.
Prim Health Care Res Dev. 2021 Nov 19;22:e71. doi: 10.1017/S1463423621000724.
The 2020 COVID-19 pandemic continues during 2021. Some countries are revisiting their containment measures to be eased or re-imposed after massive testing programs. Yet is testing itself a solution? Testing may be an important containment step, yet in low-income countries (LICs), it may be substantially challenging to carry out. This is because the situation in LICs is complexified by inadequate and corrupt economic, political, and healthcare systems in which testing is often beyond reach. Focusing on Pakistan and Papua New Guinea (PNG), we contend that the sparse number of recorded COVID-19 infections may demonstrate that both countries lack the required resources to conduct effective testing and deal with the pandemic. To appropriately tackle the pandemic, such countries need focus on implementing the measures they can and on public education about how viruses work and why it is so important to seek to contain their spread. Furthermore, we invite thorough studies to examine and analyze massive testing from various perspectives.
2020 年新冠疫情持续到 2021 年。一些国家在大规模检测计划后重新审视放宽或重新实施的遏制措施。然而,检测本身是否是一个解决方案?检测可能是一个重要的遏制步骤,但在低收入国家(LICs),实施起来可能具有相当大的挑战性。这是因为 LICs 的情况因经济、政治和医疗保健系统不完善和腐败而变得复杂,在这些系统中,检测往往遥不可及。以巴基斯坦和巴布亚新几内亚(PNG)为例,我们认为,记录的 COVID-19 感染病例数量很少可能表明这两个国家缺乏进行有效检测和应对大流行所需的资源。为了妥善应对这一大流行病,这些国家需要关注实施他们能够实施的措施,并就病毒的工作原理以及为什么努力遏制其传播如此重要进行公众教育。此外,我们邀请进行全面研究,从各个角度检查和分析大规模检测。