Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
The Process of Analysis: Breaking Down Components and Finding Connections …
The Process of Analysis: Breaking Down Components and Finding Connections
Perception and Experience of Poor Filipinos towards the Pandemic
Their priorities and struggles were more anchored on meeting their basic needs rather than protecting themselves from the COVID-19 virus.
Poor Filipinos view the pandemic as a lesser threat to them than hunger. (Archie)
Poor Filipinos see the risk of hunger as a more imminent threat than contracting the coronavirus. (Jazmeen)
The poor Filipinos struggled surviving everyday especially in supporting their families during the pandemic. (Evan)
They didn’t view COVID-19 as a threat but as a smaller problem compared to the hunger and poverty they experience every day. (Lia)
The poor struggled more on problematizing how to manage getting their basic needs met like food, water, and money just so they could survive each day during the pandemic. (Mikaela)
The poor view starvation as a bigger threat than even a highly infectious and deadly virus. (Jet)
It threatened their survival more than their physical safety. (Sophia)
The less fortunate viewed the pandemic and the associated lockdown as a death sentence. (Rafael)
The Filipino poor had been subjected to militaristic, oppressive, and anti-poor policies, being vilified by the Duterte administration.
The people who needed more help from the government were turned into villains. (Ashley)
The COVID-19 response of the Philippines shows that once again, its government is performative, incompetent, and very anti-poor. (Jet)
It shows that a pandemic is a killing ground, a continuation of his mass murdering; we must conform to his every command that he says, or else our life will be at stake. (Bjorn)
The Filipino poor had been subjected to militaristic, oppressive, and anti-poor policies, being vilified by the Duterte administration.
The people who needed more help from the government were turned into villains. (Ashley)
The COVID-19 response of the Philippines shows that once again, its government is performative, incompetent, and very anti-poor. (Jet)
It shows that a pandemic is a killing ground, a continuation of his mass murdering; we must conform to his every command that he says, or else our life will be at stake. (Bjorn)
Assumptions underlying their Perception and Experience
The Government’s incompetence during the pandemic had worsened the living conditions of the poor Filipinos.
What the government are doing are not enough to support those who are in need. (Archie)
Neglect by the government as they failed to keep true their promise to provide food. (Jet)
Promises of assistance ("ayuda") were often unfulfilled, with many receiving little or no aid at all. (Rafael)
They do not have the luxury to worry about the virus itself because the provisions given by the government is not at all enough to feed their families. (Mikaela)
Millions were left with no food, no money, no work, while receiving no help from the government, which they should have been able to depend on during times like that. (Cyrelle)
Their statements implicitly convey the failure of the government to properly give support to the marginalized group of the country. (Evan)
This situation tells us the administration's inadequate handling of the crisis, worsening an already dire situation for the poor. (Rafael)
The pandemic's disruptions, imposed by the lockdowns and restrictions, significantly impacted their income. (Sophia)
The lack of access and means to pursue quality healthcare had made Filipinos more vulnerable to the COVID-19 virus and other related issues.
The challenge to pick between following health measures and sustaining the family's needs can have negative mental health consequences. (Sophia)
The masses are not given the privilege to decide whether to get the vaccine or not. (Bjorn)
While the lockdown was intended to protect public health, it had disproportionately adverse effects on the less fortunate. (Rafael)
The masses are not given the privilege to decide whether to get the vaccine or not. (Bjorn)
While the lockdown was intended to protect public health, it had disproportionately adverse effects on the less fortunate. (Rafael)
Implications
The current circumstances prompted many Filipinos not to follow the health protocols and standards assigned.
These people are struggling to make ends meet, yet the government keeps implementing rules and regulations that are detrimental to them while, in turn, keeping a blind eye and just shutting these people with meager support. (Bjorn)
The poor Filipinos are forced to break the rules and protocols during the pandemic lockdown. (Mikaela)
Despite the danger brought upon by the COVID-19 and the implementation of lockdown, these Filipinos still had to go out of their homes just to work and find food for themselves and their families. (Evan)
Stuck in a cycle of having no choice but to break said policies to secure the most basic of necessities and then getting branded as a “pasaway” to be dealt with harshly, the poor were not given a chance at all. (Jet)
A clear, direct, and inclusive communication with the Filipinos should had been prioritized by the Government to address the health crisis.
This situation emphasizes the urgent need for more effective communication between the government and the public. (Sophia)
A great need to reevaluate how the government should respond on the ongoing pandemic. (Archie)
They were confused and misguided; the ‘poor people’ lacked guidance and support from the government. (Cyrelle)
A great need to reevaluate how the government should respond on the ongoing pandemic. (Archie)
They were confused and misguided; the ‘poor people’ lacked guidance and support from the government. (Cyrelle)