Summary
- Kenya currently engages in many solid helpful government activities during this time including reallocating budgets, constant updates, increased testing capacity, destigmatising campaigns, national and county government collaboration, and extensive contact tracing of infected persons.
- However, some decisions, not including the curfew or lockdowns, prove more controversial.
- The case of a bus from Mombasa to Nakuru that inadvertently carried an infected passenger sent shockwaves.
As the Covid-19 pandemic continues to sweep across the world and
this week hit 1.4 million cases, citizens from all over the planet turn
to their governments to stem the tide of death and economic
destruction. In comparing nations, mass testing is shown to be one of
the critical factors in taming the virus' spread.
South
Korean President Moon Jae-in mobilised factories across his country to
churn out Covid-19 testing kits, implemented mobile technology to notify
citizens of nearby cases and testing options, fostered transparent news
conferences building a sense of duty among citizens and trust in
government, and conducted a staggering 300,000 tests in the first six
weeks of the pandemic, all with no lockdowns and focused on
self-isolating rather than forced quarantine in government facilities.
In
contrast, the United States' first positive case came on the same day
as South Korea. American President Donald Trump initially downplayed the
severity of the pandemic, botched initial testing implementation,
demonised transparency, but also did not implement lockdowns and
similarly focused instead on self-isolating instead of quarantine in
government facilities. The difference in approach has led to
dramatically 600 percent better South Korean outcomes with 0.02 percent
infected compared with 0.12 percent of the American population.
Here
in Kenya, both President Uhuru Kenyatta and Health Secretary Mutahi
Kagwe have received largely positive commendations for their forthright,
information-filled, and compassionate public statements, though with
some notable detractors. Yet the important issue remains: does the
Government of Kenya's response to the pandemic aid or inhibit the
compliance of the citizenry.
Kenya currently engages in
many solid helpful government activities during this time including
reallocating budgets, constant updates, increased testing capacity,
destigmatising campaigns, national and county government collaboration,
and extensive contact tracing of infected persons. However, some
decisions, not including the curfew or lockdowns, prove more
controversial. The case of a bus from Mombasa to Nakuru that
inadvertently carried an infected passenger sent shockwaves. Reports
indicate that fellow passengers who may have been unwittingly exposed to
the virus must present themselves to authorities for mandatory
quarantine in government facilities or face prosecution and jail. Also,
anyone testing positive for Covid-19 is taken to government facilities
and those in close proximity to those proven to be infected taken to
government isolation areas.
Such issues raise a common question in occupational psychology.
Which is more effective to gain legislative or regulatory compliance:
affirmative or negative basis of threats? Researcher Peter May explores
the difference between affirmative motivations of compliance that
emanate from good intentions and a sense of obligation to comply and
negative motivations, on the other hand, that stem from anxiety over
consequences if discovered to have violated the regulatory requirements.
The research found that in business situations, affirmative motivations
prove stronger than the negative alternative.
Unfortunately,
in our Kenyan Covid-19 battle, we employ a mixed approach with more
negative motivations for infected or traced contacts with affirmative
motivations utilised for the general public.
We hold
one of the most negative motivation enforcements for infected or traced
contacts in the world by disallowing their self-isolation with checks
and requiring, instead, forced quarantine in government facilities.
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