COVID-19: An Open Letter to Social Workers
COVID-19:
An Open Letter to Social Workers
Dear social workers
I hope you have been
staying well and taking care of your loved ones during the pandemic COVID-19.
Image is coped from Google Images |
Therefore, I write this
open letter to you – in fact to ourselves – with both regret and hope.
Regrettably, at the time of writing this open letter, the live tracker of the
John Hopkins University confirms the total cases of the COVID-19 have reached
to 471,518 globally. It also reports the total global death of 21,293 due to
COVID-19. Yet, there is hope on the other hand as the same live tracker of the
John Hopkins University confirms the total global recovery of 114, 444 who were
infected in last few months.
Personally, I am
extremely concerned to abovementioned figures. But, my regret and hope are not
only limited to the figures that the John Hopkins University presents. Rather,
these have a deep connection to my ‘professional-self’. Here, it is relevant to
briefly explain why so. Since 2007, soon after completing my undergraduate
degree in social work, I have proudly celebrated my status of being
professional social worker in the hope that I will be there when societies will
need my professional services most. And this ‘professional-self’ has been
suddenly shattered in the backdrop of pandemic COVID-19.
Last week I was still
teaching master’s level social work students in Australia and in one occasion
the students asked – ‘so, what is the role of social work at this tumultuous
time due to the pandemic COVID-19’? My students are not alone with this
question. Every time I scroll the pages of social medias, I have often found
someone with social work background asking the same question. Unfortunately,
there is, to the best of my knowledge, no tangible answer from social workers
and social work bodies until now.
It is also relevant to
personalise this very context. My mother, nearly 70 years old and living in a
rural part of Nepal, spoke to me via Facebook Messenger two days ago. Given the
COVID-19 related unprecedented death rate mostly amongst elderly peoples, she
is already in the state of fear, trauma, and depression. As an elderly person
she is not only worried about herself but also about her elderly husband, her
children, and her grandchildren, and then about her relatives as well as the
community of which she is the part. She asked me – ‘aren’t there [expert] peoples
to help persons like her and her relatives’? I found to an extent that question
was directed to me.
The impacts of the
COVID-19 are not just personal, and neither only physical. Check out the
expert’s opinions and emerging evidences, the COVID-19 has impacted almost all
spheres of peoples’ lives. As many economists have argued, we are already at
the brink of economy collapse. Several economists furthermore believe that the
result of economy collapse will devastate job market and will likely hard hit
those who are in the lower strata of the job markets, poor, refugees, and
several other vulnerable groups.
In addition, in the
backdrop of the pandemic COVID-19, the early evidences are suggesting that the
healthcare system is about to fail in the countries, which are developed and
enjoy advanced economy such as the USA, the UK, Italy, and Spain. We cannot
imagine if the situation remains the same for little longer what will happen to
those nations, such as in Asia and Africa, which healthcare system almost does
not exist. In addition, there has been already some signs of emerging new
racism and new vested politics. And hence, I am worry not only about today but
also about tomorrow.
The more I am thinking
about this moment the more I am asking question – what my own role is being a
professional social worker in particular and what is the role of the profession
in general. It is not something that I am ignored of social work responses to
the COVID-19. Nevertheless, to the best of my knowledge, what I have found until
now is that social work is mostly engaged in ‘reporting’ and ‘awareness
building’. My own lived experience during the 2015 earthquake in Nepal rejects
this limited approach of social work’s ‘reporting’. During the 2015 earthquake
in Nepal, the international social work – combined of individual and
institutional – heavily reported about the 2015 earthquake in Nepal.
Eventually, many of them also published and presented about the 2015 earthquake
in Nepal in the international platforms. The only right thing was not done was
to engage in actions to help to the survivors of earthquake in the long run.
That was an act of ‘romanticising of social work by international social work’
at the national level. The crisis that we face today is global, threating the entire
humanity; and therefore any ‘romanticism’ will be deemed to be unethical and
inhuman from social work perspective itself. There is no option for
‘romanticising’ but to engage innovatively, ethically, and responsively with
the intentions to bring positive impacts and results for all of us.
As I wrote earlier, I
am also hopeful to the profession of social work as it is about humanity. And
this humanity connection begs for our responses at the time of pandemic
COVID-19. Time and again, despite some constraints and weaknesses within the
construction of social work profession, social work has taken the side of
humanity in solidarity with those who are vulnerable and required its services
most. Today, the number of vulnerable peoples is not in hundreds, not even in
thousands but in millions. They desperately need our services.
So, how do we
(re-)create hope for them? I believe at this moment social workers of the
world, despite their ideological differences, must organise themselves in
solidarity with a common goal to combat the pandemic COVID-19 and its related
social, economic, physical, and mental effects. Hence, I believe, the
followings are some initial steps that the world social workers can do. Again,
these are my personal suggestions and should be treated as flexible and
modifiable. We should, in my opinion,
§ Liaise
with potential individual social workers and all international, regional, and
national social work bodies to establish a high-level global task force to
respond to the COVID-19.
§ This
high-level global task force should immediately gather and organise social
workers who have experiences in dealing with and responding to epidemic and
pandemic situations.
§ Given
the impacts of the COVID-19 are multifaceted affecting all aspects of our
lives, the high-level task force should invite and engage expertise from other
disciplines. At the very beginning, collaborating and working together with
epidemiologist, human power in public health, and data scientists, for example,
will equip us with initial insights. Later the list of external expertise could
be expanded as the need arises.
§ The
high-level global task force should engage in a fast-track approach to clarify
what is social work’s positionality during this ongoing pandemic, as well as
clarify how world social workers will engage in short-term and long-term.
§ The
high-level global task force should address the social workers globally
informing them about the task force’s vision and mission statements and appeal
them to collaborate and when needed to volunteer to their national and regional
bodies. Where there is no national social work body, the high-level global task
force can support them to establish national task force.
§ The
high-level global task force should finalise their plan as soon as possible and
immediately translate the plans into actions. Given the spontaneity nature of
the plans and actions, call potential social workers who have expertise to
volunteer.
§ Given
this is a very new and unique encounter for the profession of social work, the
high-level global task force should continuously engage in collecting evidences
and proactively improve the responses based on evidences when needed.
§ While
doing all these, the high-level global task force should explore for the
opportunity to make itself sustainable as its existence will be in need for
long-term given the impacts of the COVID-19.
It is my personal
conviction that this is the right thing to do at this moment being a social
work professional. This is also right thing to do if we really want to
essentialise the meaning of international and global social work not just in
the words but also in the actions.
In the end, I am well
aware that this ‘present’ soon will be the ‘history’ and then the heirs of
social work will ask us what we did when the global societies needed us most. I
do not need to remind you that how our founders in the post-industrial and
post-world war era did the right thing by laying the foundations for
professional social work and helping those who needed their professional
services most in those times. And now, it is our time to bear responsibility
and advance the profession by doing the right thing.
In solidarity!
Raj Yadav
Australia
March 26, 2020
#socialwork
#Coronavirus #COVID-19 #Socialworkresponse #insolidarity
(Note: This post is
copied from Facebook profile of Dr. Raj Yadav. This blog has taken permission
to re-post this open letter).
Advertise
Advertise
Comments
Post a Comment