Category Archives: Life

Coronavirus: My Personal Thoughts and Preparation

[I am not an epidemiologist/expert. These are all from my personal research, interpretation, and general preparation]

Like everyone around, I have been following the Coronavirus outbreak very closely for the last month and half. In my observation there are two school of extreme opinions out there (well there is also mass ignorance and indifference in some cases, but I am talking about the educated, well informed crowd):

covid19-growth-healthcare

1) Why are we so worried about this when flu (or smoking or car accident–insert any large number of death event) kills so many people anyway

2) PANIC. WE NEED TO MOVE TO THE MOUNTAINS…

While panic is the wrong solution, so is indifference–we should try to gather all the information and look at the whole situation from the first principle. The best thing we can do is somehow reduce the growth rate of the virus so that a) we do not shock load our already frail healthcare system b) we buy time to get to a vaccine c) get to a point so that the so called growth factor of the disease growth plateaus out (an excellent video on this here).

Facts First

First let’s discuss the facts that we know from competent sources:

  1. COVID-19 is way more fatal than normal flu and if you just looked at the history, the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic infected 27% of the world population and killed ~50 million (it killed 20M+ in India alone). The global movement rate at that time was a fraction of that of the present day. And if we look at the context from historical pandemics, it looks closer to the Spanish Flu than the general Flu or even Swine Flu.

Source: Boston Consulting Group Report

2. The death rate for older people/people with pre-existing conditions is much higher than that of the young crowd. Hence the young outgoing crowd can easily become the main spreading vector and infect the older population.

covid-19-death

3. ANY healthcare system has its limitations and is not designed to support a high number of people being sick at the same time. An exponential growth of a pandemic unchecked can destroy a healthcare infrastructure by shock loading it.

covid19-growth-healthcare

4. Vaccine is at least a year away and if unchecked virus grows exponentially (in layman’s term–takes just weeks to 10x)

5. The virus primarily spreads from contact with infected people OR surfaces that contacted the infected person–the primary source is water droplets and not air.

 

Preparation

With all of these facts in mind, from the first principle, these are following steps I am personally taking (let me also acknowledge that I am incredibly  privileged to be able to do a lot of these):

infographic-coronavirus

Source: John Hopkins Infographics (best ways to protect)

  1. The most obvious ones: a) religiously wash hands before and after entering home and office, eating food b) use proper hand washing technique c) wipe phone, laptop, and keys with disinfectants d) wipe desks and other regularly used surfaces e) try to not touch eye, face (pretty bad at this) f) separate out outdoor clothes from indoor ones

  2. Work from home: unless need to be in the office for some specific meetings/interviews, plan to work from home for the next few weeks

  3. Reduce social contact–I have decided to stop going to parties and large gatherings (history shows that social distancing works).

  4. I have stopped using public transportation and have been using the Lyft ebikes to commute to work (disinfect the bike handles)

  5. Prepare for a shock in the supply chain/reduce my exposure to groceries: While shock in the supply chain is unlikely (even in Wuhan they had super markets open), Groceries are probably the worst place to be. So I have gotten dry food which would probably last me about a month. Nothing fancy–rice, lentil, beans, pasta, can of soup, frozen meat, fish etc.

  6. Taking good nutrition, multivitamin supplement, proper rest, and drinking a lot of water.

  7. Talk to older community and family members and try to find a safe solution for them

coronavirus-preparation

Source: My personal pantry stocks (dry food, frozen food, camping food)

The main benefit of this is that these efforts will be that we will not shock load the healthcare system and buy us time and hopefully this way we would be able to flatten out the growth curve and after reaching an inflection point.

inflection-covid19

Source: Exponential growth and epidemics

Context of Bangladesh:

Bangladesh has just announced 3 active cases of Cornavirus as of March 8, 2020. Being an extremely densely populated country with third world infrastructure makes it really scary, and some of my friends and family back home are justifiably afraid. We have already seen what the shock loading of infrastructure looks like–markets are already out of handwash and maps.

However, I think the same principle applies to Bangladesh. In addition, one saving grace (not fully scientifically tested, but highly likely) is that given high temperature and humidity of Bangladesh, Coronavirus will most likely survive outside of the host body for a very small time (minute-hours vs days for colder weather: John Hopkins University did an excellent study on this). However, given the high population density and general bad hygiene in the masses, it is still extremely dangerous–especially given bad air quality people are very prone to respiratory diseases. I am particularly worried about older friends and family members in Bangladesh.

Turkish Diary: Part 1

I decided to visit Turkey almost on a whim. I was supposed to return at eBay during the winter, but the US authority did not process the work authorization in time—the bliss of being an international! So at the New Year eve, I decided that I should make the best use of the free time I have now and should travel somewhere. Although that meant being almost broke, but I also realized that in near future finding time will be more of an issue than funding any reasonable travel. So more or less randomly, I chose Turkey. Actually now that I thought about it I realized it might seem like a random decision, but it was a not so surprising! In terms of practical reasons, Turkey had pretty cheap plane tickets and they have the fastest visa processing system for any country in Europe (and yes! I do need visa unlike the US citizens). So speaking of the bang per buck, Turkey was a no-brainer!

View of Istanbul from the Galata Bridge

View of Istanbul from the Galata Bridge

Then the second reason, which was probably playing a role in my subconscious, was that Turkey being one of the leaders of the Muslim world has a lot of cultural influence in the subcontinent. Only after visiting Turkey I realized that so much of the Muslim cultural elements—from Sufism to names—in Bangladesh was from Turkey or was influenced by the Turks. This makes sense because when the Turks marched towards India the brought those Ottoman cultures with them (and yes! Delhi was under Ottoman rule at some point!). So it was good to get back to the roots of those cultural elements. Also my father visited Turkey almost 20 years ago and in my childhood I heard numerous stories about those tours. So growing up (or almost growing up!) I had to see what the fuss is all about! It was a rite of passage, if you will, or just another family thing!

Because I would go to even Alaska if I needed for cheap tickets, I got flights to Turkey from the Newark airport! Newark is somewhere in New Jersey. But to get there I decided to use public transportation (because paying 100 dollars for a taxi would defeat the purpose of the cheap tickets). Once more in my life, I realized that digital map and navigation system is the best thing invented by human beings after fire! Basically using google map, I hopped from one bus to another and was in Newark in an hour!

Gloomy Munich

Gloomy Munich

I was in Munich in 8 hours and the weather looked surprisingly gloomy. However, when I landed in Istanbul Ataturk airport the 13 C (55 F) air welcomed me! Compared to the super sub-zero weather and lack of sun-light I have been experiencing in the New York City in the last month, this seemed to be a tropical paradise! However, later I learned from the hotel people that the temperature is supposed to be around 0 C. But hey! I am not complaining!

In Boston, we often feel proud for having a few hundred years old buildings and going to a school which is about 400 years old, but in Istanbul things generally start with a 500 to thousand years count! On my way to Taksim from the airport, I saw the walls from the Byzantine Empire, which were used to protect the city thousands of years ago. And still those are standing tall—talk about the engineering!

Public Transpiration in Istanbul

Public Transportation in Istanbul

One great thing about Istanbul is that the city has great public transportation system. In fact, they have one of the oldest public transportation systems in the world and it is still operational. So I took a subway from Taksim to my hotel. When I was going up, I realized how deep the subway was! Later an internet search revealed that on average the subways are about 20 meters deep, because there are so many old artifacts under the ground that when the risk of destroying those if they don’t dig that deep for their subways.

(To be continued…)

Year in Review and What to Achieve Next Year

“Investing in knowledge, growth and personal development is the best investment you can make.”

 

Looking back, I feel that in 2013 I tried hard to start following this statement very closely. I had pretty good success in some of those and failed terribly in some. So before I start a new year I thought that it would be good to evaluate those and see where I stand. I am doing this mostly because writing this forced me to think about what I am doing right and what I am doing wrong.

Personal Development:

I feel at this point of my life personal development is probably the best favor I can do to my future self (but as economics taught me, hyperbolic discounting makes things hard!). Last year was the start of my lifelong journey to becoming more healthy, dressing better, and last but not least, making meaningful connections with people.

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