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Here’s How You Can Support On-Ground Volunteers During COVID-19

Sport Complex In Delhi Converted Into COVID-19 Care Centre

An oxygen cylinder for patients inside an isolation ward at the Commonwealth Games Village Sports Complex which is temporarily converted into a coronavirus care Centre in New Delhi, India on July 14, 2020. This sports complex is equipped with a bed capacity of 500 and is attached to LNJP hospital to treat mild and asymptomatic patients infected with corona virus. (Photo by Mayank Makhija/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

The second wave of the Covid-19 pandemic has hit the country hard. Some families in need during this pandemic need to make over 50 phone calls till they can find what they need — a cylinder, oxygen concentrator, bed or one of the many drugs now on the black market. People have lost friends and relatives to Covid and everyone around us is struggling to cope with feelings of helplessness, fear of uncertainty and the grief that accompanies loss.

As Covid-19 cases continued to surge in India people are struggling to get hospital beds, ventilators, oxygen cylinders, injections and medicines. ( Photo by Sonu Mehta/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)

One of them had this to say on one of our research calls, “Right now, there are 100 times more claims for resources than actual resources. There are also 10 times more useless lists than actual resources.” Verification of resources is the bulk of the work.

Right now, thousands of volunteers are working on-ground as well as online, trying to find resources for people who require them. Many of them have been volunteers at our cleanups and tree plantation drives and we can feel the immense pressure they are under.

In our conversations with them, some of the things volunteers said they needed were care packages, masks, gloves, PPEs and oximeters. They also wanted to understand how to structure their work, deal with grief when someone they have been helping passes away, and generally safeguard mental health using breathing exercises and meditation techniques.

With this in mind, Jhatkaa.org has launched the #Care4Care campaign. It is an initiative that was born out of conversations with some of our partner organisations and movements. This is our effort to contribute to the collective in these times and support volunteers logistically as well as emotionally as they help others during this pandemic.

Under this campaign, we aim to provide whatever care we can rally to the volunteers who are putting in time and energy for the victims of Covid-19 and their families.

Most of these volunteers are between the ages of 15 and 25 and are running purely on the energy of compassion and humanity. Many of them are experiencing burnout because they are constantly online, cross-checking, verifying and updating resources. Every 6 to 12 hours, they go through the databases, again and again, keeping an eye out for sources that have run dry.

It is an emotionally overwhelming job and they need our support. So how can all of us come together and make their work a little easier?

You can contribute by:

  1. Joining us as a volunteer with this sign-up form.
  2. Donating to this campaign on this donation page.
  3. Sharing this campaign with your friends on FacebookTwitter and Instagram!

This article was first published here.

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