covid 19 pandemic in the world special amphasis on your experience during the lock down
Answers
Answer:
let's start
Explanation:
The COVID-19 outbreak has posed fundamental challenges to how we go about meeting our usual duties to engage and communicate with our local communities and we have prioritised the health, safety and welfare of patients, staff and wider society in our response to the pandemic.
At North East Hampshire and Farnham Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) we know that service provision can be improved if we can learn more about the views, experiences and concerns of patients, service users, carers and our wider communities.
The COVID-19 pandemic has affected us all and caused many organisations to change the way they are working. One challenge for us has been how we continue to carry out the high standards of local engagement activity we would normally be working towards, whilst prioritising the health, safety and welfare of everyone.
Following the introduction of social distancing and in line with government and NHS England advice, we postponed all face-to-face engagement activity in March 2020. We do however recognise a continued and critical need to engage and have had a continued constructive dialogue with local people and patients throughout this time. We continue to monitor the situation in light of any new guidance which may allow us to resume more traditional forms of engagement work.
Due to the Covid-19 crisis, the spring of 2020 was lived in quite exceptional circumstances: more than 3 billion people around the world were confined, i.e., almost half of the world’s population. The lockdown was the only solution deemed to be effective in limiting the spread of the virus and the number of sick people and in keeping hospitals uncluttered. Lockdown is a single solution, but it has different psychological consequences that have not yet been fully measured. One initial consequence is a profound upheaval in our relationship with time. Recent international surveys on the judgment of the passage of time (PoT) during the lockdown suggested that people have experienced a slowing down of time (Cellini et al., 2020; Droit-Volet et a