As India is
slowly MOVES towards a step by step removal of national lockdown imposed due to
the Covid-19 pandemic, there have been wide-ranging discussions in government
circles on what should be India’s strategy for an exit scenario. The Ministry
of Home Affairs from time to time has issued various guidelines for managing
with the Covid 19 impacts; Aarogya Setu App, state guidelines,mandatory wearing
of mask, social distancing amongst other
elements in the fight against Covid-19.
With the
restarting of economy and life on the governments’ agenda, various guidelines on ‘restarting’ India and
among these the most important one is to create Standard Operating Procedures
(SOPs) to ensure that preventive measures are executed in a systematic manner post–lockdown; the other guiding principles are as follows:
PROCESS FOR IMPLEMENTATION
OF SOPS
The Covid-19
team should comprise of a factory / warehouse / shop / office in-charge, human
resource manager, business supervisor or head of business, administration /
utility in charge, medical expert on site (or identify the nearest medical
expert and security personnel). In case of local market or mandi
operators, the same can be managed by the market / trade association or local mandi
operator.
Ground Zero: Online involvement of staff, if possible online training, to fight the
disease and restrict / minimal onsite interactions
Week 1: Framing the SOP; the company should get the SOP verified by the local
authorities or an internal / external expert
Week 2: Start operation as per government regulations; however, only staff who
have observed clear 14 days’ quarantine should attend the office; and only
necessary staff should attend in person, the support staff can operate from
home
Week 3: Organisations in manufacturing / trading or service should try and
achieve minimum capacity utilisation
Week 4: Entering this stage, and if all things go well and no additional
positive patients are identified in the organisation, then the capacity
utilisation can be increased by 20% per week moving forward, subject to
government guidelines.
The broader
framework of the SOP should cover at least the following:
1. Identify the risk area
a. Entrance
b. Office meeting room
c. Change room
d. Canteen
e. Shopfloor
f. Restrooms
g. Warehouse / storage areas, etc.
2. Identify / implement the
mitigating measures
3. Define the processes to be
implemented to prevent / report for Covid-19 occurrences based on severity
a. If the locality is Covid-free,
then business as usual
b. If the locality is in the
vicinity of an impacted locality, then business as usual with close monitoring
c. Locality impacted and declared as
hotspot: severe impact
d. Locality declared as containment
zone: highly severe impact
4. Identify the person responsible for
implementation of measures
5. Reporting to local health authorities /
municipal corporation or others
6. Mandatory checklist for business continuity
plan post-lockdown to be implemented
7. Regular monitoring, review and update of the
protocols.
(* Sector-specific
SOPs are recommended)
SUGGESTED ELEMENTS OF SOPS FOR SERVICE INDUSTRY
Client-facing
operations such as banking, insurance, other professional services, etc. should
consider continuing online / mobile servicing of clients where possible. Office
workers to include bare minimum staff required to run back-end operations. As
the risk and rate of infection drops in an area, officer attendance can slowly
be increased.
(A) Delivery of office supplies
(B) Labour / employee
(C) Office setup
(D) Travel / business trip
(E) Dealing with clients and partners
(F) Dealing with bank / financial
institutions
(G)
Infrastructure for safety of staff / labour
The above is
an illustrative list and not exhaustive; additionally, industry / sector-wise
specific SOPs are recommended.
IMPLEMENT, REVIEW
AND IMPROVE