Case Study: Pandemic (DP IB Geography)

Revision Note

Case Study: COVID-19

Covid-19 Pandemic 

Causes

  • Covid-19 is a novel coronavirus, caused by SARS_CoV-2

    • Novel viruses are new diseases 

    • Other examples of coronavirus in the past include:

      • SARS coronavirus (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome)

      • MERS coronavirus (Middle East Respiratory Syndrome)

  • Covid-19 originated in Wuhan, China in 2019

    • It was traced back to a market in the city and the animals sold there

    • This supports a zoonotic outbreak theory

    • Others theorise it may have come from the Wuhan Institue of Virology

  • The World Health Organisation named Covid-19 a global pandemic in March 2020

incidences-of-covid-19-in-jan-2020-1

Impacts

  • It is still an ongoing pandemic

  • Over 700,000,000 cases have been recorded

  • Nearly 7 million people have died

  • As it was a novel coronavirus, there was very little prior local and global awareness about it

  • Symptoms include:

    • Fever

    • Dry cough

    • Shortness of breath

    • Exhaustion

    • Cold symptoms

    • Loss of smell or taste

  • Whilst many have recovered, lots of people suffer from Long Covid:

    • Brain fog

    • Insomnia

    • Exhaustion or chronic fatigue

    • Can also affect heart function, stomach issues, muscle pains

  • School closures across the world, resulting in missed education 

  • Businesses closed and many people became unemployed

  • Hospitality and retail closed

  • Borders closed, hitting the travel and tourist industries

  • More deaths occurred in areas of poverty, exacerbating inequalities 

  • Extreme poverty rates rose

  • It affected the global economy, leaving many countries in recession

  • Large gatherings and important events were banned or cancelled e.g. marathons, the 2020 Olympics and festivals

Management

  • Many strategies were adopted across the world to combat the pandemic 

  • Management solutions differed between different countries

  • Lockdowns were enforced, and people could not leave their homes

    • Wuhan enforced a lockdown in January 2020

    • The UK was criticised for enforcing a lockdown too late

    • Some countries were incredibly strict with their lockdowns, with very little freedom for the public 

      • China adopted a Zero-Covid Policy, which resulted in protests and a severe hit to the public’s mental health

  • Initial border closures, followed by mandatory quarantining for travellers 

    • Some countries kept their borders firmly shut, for example, New Zealand closed their borders for 2 years

    • Once vaccines arrived, travel rules eased, as long as you had evidence of vaccination or recent infection

  • International action was a vital part of the pandemic management:

    • The global vaccine rollout was an important moment in 2021

    • The most vulnerable had high priority e.g. the elderly, people in healthcare and people with illnesses

    • The World Health Organisation aimed to vaccinate 70% of the world’s population by 2022

    • In many countries, vaccination was an official requirement for certain people

  • Contact tracing and testing were a vital part of tracking the spread

    • Many countries had apps that would notify you of being in the presence of a positive case

    • Encouragement of regular testing

    • Encouragement to keep distance from people outside their household

  • After the lifting of major lockdowns, other restrictions remained in place

    • Some countries enforced nighttime curfews 

    • Some countries adopted rules for hospitality and other events

      • Germany had a ‘2G’ rule, where people were only allowed to take part in certain activities if they were ‘geimpft’ (vaccinated) and ‘genesen’ (recovered) 

    • Encouragement or mandates for masking in public spaces in many countries

  • The media played a vital role:

    • TV, social media and other media outlets spread information and educated people about the pandemic

    • However, misinformation and ‘fake news’ became a problem

    • The media labelled Covid-19 as ‘Wuhan Virus’ or ‘China Virus’, which increased xenophobia and racism-fuelled violence

  • There was economic support for people in many countries where people faced unemployment

    • Many governments offered more than half of people’s salaries

    • International debt relief e.g. paying off loans and stopping evictions

income-support-in-covid-19

Examiner Tip

Make sure you link back this case study to how we manage pandemics, including prior awareness, international action and the role of the media.

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