COVID-19: Impact and Need for Post-Pandemic Crowd Safety – A Review

COVID-19: Impact and Need for Post-Pandemic Crowd Safety – A Review

Pranav Taneja, Manan Arora, Abhay Mendiratta, Alankrita Aggarwal, Shailender Kumar
DOI: 10.4018/IJSPPC.2021070101
OnDemand:
(Individual Articles)
Available
$37.50
No Current Special Offers
TOTAL SAVINGS: $37.50

Abstract

The world is going through one of the worst pandemics ever seen. After concurrent lockdowns, as the government is easing out, more people are on the verge of risking their lives. This leads to a need for a system that not only provides a user with relevant updates regarding this disease but is essentially a useful tool that can be used to provide a safest path between a source and a destination. Most of the people now are equipped with smart devices. Since the spread is nowhere near its termination and the world is having a lot of breakdowns be it in the form of economic disruption or sociological imbalance due to this, though the government is already working hard on detecting and declaring hotspot zones, there is no real-time evaluation of potentially crowded zones that can be a source of disease synthesis too. There is a need for a system that can notify its users regarding any kind of potentially harmful zones, and since getting on the road is more than a necessity now, a safe route provisioning system is also a dire need of the situation in order to stop the spread.
Article Preview
Top

3. Economic Disrupt

Foreign and foreign tourism is banned, and tourism and tourism revenues, accounting for 9.2% of GDP, will weigh heavily on GDP growth rates. Flight costs will fall by USD 1.57 billion. Oil also took a downgrade in price in March (Chaudhary, Sodani & Das, 2020). Though decrease in oil price will reduce economic deficits, cash will increase. Money continues to plummet. MSMEs will incur significant costs. The crisis has seen a mass exodus of people from other parts of the world. Their main concerns were job losses, daily assignments.

Top

4. Situation Of Poverty

In the absence of solid data on the impact of this ongoing crisis, the only window we have to understand the situation of workers in Indian cities is anecdotal. However, large-scale telephone research is one way to measure ground reality.

But representative, reliable and reliable telephone research is also challenging in popular times in India where poor people have limited access to calls and/or change phone numbers regularly. The existing respondent database can deal with some of the problems associated with telephone survey representation.Figure 2 shows the countries where poverty can increase dramatically. It is far from the biggest effect that can be seen in the Country. India is guilty of having a large number of high-risk people, who have just escaped poverty, along with the most important collapse expected in economic growth. India has seen an upscale of growth of 11% in 2020, which is one of the deepest economies in the world. This has dramatically changed the course of poverty. India has recently relinquished its title as the country with the highest poverty rate in Nigeria.

Complete Article List

Search this Journal:
Reset
Volume 16: 1 Issue (2024): Forthcoming, Available for Pre-Order
Volume 15: 1 Issue (2023)
Volume 14: 4 Issues (2022): 1 Released, 3 Forthcoming
Volume 13: 4 Issues (2021)
Volume 12: 4 Issues (2020)
View Complete Journal Contents Listing