Science, asked by tenzindakar, 4 months ago

write down any five changes around you occured in the period of lockdown​

Answers

Answered by Divineshallots09
0

. Healthcare will become a poll issue

After this pandemic, the whole understanding of healthcare will undergo a dramatic change. Future planning will be entirely data driven. Governments will count how many doctors we have, how many beds we have, and everyone will be spending a lot on healthcare infrastructure. The way healthcare is delivered — doctors and patients talking to each other face to face — will disappear. Healthcare will become virtual.

You will fly less, and pay much more

In the last two decades, the aviation boom has given many middle-class Indians wings to fly. Now, those bustling terminals resemble ghost towns. And with people expected to be scared of flying for a long, long time, aviation experts say there will be a drastic reduction in flights across the world. According to Centre for Asia Pacific Aviation, “by the end of May 2020, most airlines in the world will be bankrupt”. Airlines like Flybe (UK), Virgin Australia, South African Airways, Air Mauritius have already declared bankruptcy. The survivors will drastically cut capacity.

. LVs out, pyjamas in? Big spenders may have a change of heart

Instagram is a sign of the change: once a playground for luxury influencers, it is now a haven of comfy pajamas, mugs of tea and wellness advice. The luxury business is dealing with an existential problem — looks that were once coveted now just seem like strange overpriced objects. Excess and preening are now off-putting. In lockdown, many middle-class Indians have pared down their lifestyles, living in a few set of clothes, buying only essentials, and realising that family matters more than foreign travel. It’s easier to discern what we need to make us happy.

If you do go back to office, it’ll look different

Covid-19 is going to “seriously change how we look at buildings,” according to architect Gautam Bhatia, particularly if the pandemic lasts a year or even longer. And it wouldn’t be the first time a public health crisis changes architecture and urban planning — London’s infrastructure was revamped after the 1954 cholera outbreak and the clean aesthetic of modernism was in part a result of tuberculosis.

Answered by pan6
0

1) we have become more hygiene conscious.

2)Lockdown might have turbo-charged a phenomenon known as ‘The Michelangelo Effect’

3) Increase in ozone layer.

4) Increase in purity of air.

5) decrease in air pollution.

hope it's helpful

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