Abstract

In this paper, we reviewed the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) technologies applied to waves of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19). COVID-19 is an existential threat that has resulted in an unprecedented loss of lives, disruption of flight schedules, shutdown of businesses and much more. Though several researchers have highlighted the enormous benefits of 4IR technologies in containing the COVID-19 pandemic, the recent waves of the pandemic call for a thorough review of these technological interventions. The cyber-physical space has had its share of the COVID-19 pandemic effect, and through this review, we highlight the salient issues to help policy formulation towards managing the impact of subsequent COVID-19 waves within such environments. Hence, the purpose of this paper is to review the application of 4IR technologies during the COVID-19 pandemic waves and to highlight their shortcomings. Recent research articles were sourced from an online repository and thoroughly reviewed to highlight 4IR technology applications, innovations, shortcomings and multi-sector challenges. The outcome of this review indicates that the second wave of the pandemic resulted in a lower proportion of patients requiring invasive mechanical ventilation and a lower rate of thrombotic events. In addition, it was revealed that the delay between ICU admissions and tracheal intubation was longer in the second wave in the health care sector. Again, the review suggests that 4IR technologies have been utilized across all the sectors including education, businesses, society, manufacturing, healthcare, agriculture and mining. Businesses have revised their service delivery models to include 4IR technologies and avoid physical contacts. In society, digital certificates, among other digital platforms, have been utilized to assist with the movements of persons who have been vaccinated. Manufacturing concerns have also utilized robots in manufacturing to reduce human-to-human physical contact. The mining sector has automated their work processes, utilising smart boots to prevent infection, smart health bands and smart disinfection tunnels or walkthrough sanitization gates in the mining work environment. However, the identified challenges of implementing 4IR technologies include low-skilled workers, data privacy issues, data analysis poverty, data management issues and many more. The boom in 4IR technologies calls for intense legislation on sweeping data privacy for regulated tech companies. These findings hold salient implications for policy formulation towards tackling future pandemic outbreaks.

Highlights

  • This article is an open access articleThe Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, as a public health issue, has disrupted every aspect of our lives

  • The COVID-19 pandemic has been associated with different forms of “pandemic waves”, which are identified by their characteristics [1]

  • The results showed that the first wave of COVID-19 saw an average fatality rate of 15%, while the second wave of COVID-19 showed an average fatality rate of 2.5%

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Summary

Introduction

The Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, as a public health issue, has disrupted every aspect of our lives. The COVID-19 virus spreads primarily through droplets of saliva or discharge from the nose when an infected person coughs or sneezes, so it is important to practice respiratory etiquette such as “coughing into a flexed elbow” [3] Being informed about these etiquettes are primary in slowing down the transmission rate. Technological initiatives have been deployed in the cyber-physical space in an attempt to reduce the spread of the COVID-19 and monitor public areas and patients, develop new effective vaccines and guarantee the continuity of social activities [9]. It is imperative to review the technology-related responses by different sectors such as education, business, social environment, manufacturing, health, mining and agriculture within their cyber-physical space in tackling the COVID-19 pandemic waves and highlight the shortfalls, if any.

Variants of COVID-19 Pandemic Wave
Educational Sector
Business Sector Service Delivery
Movement and Interactions within a Social Environment
Manufacturing Sector
Health Sector
Agriculture
Mining
Shortcomings of 4IR Interventions to COVID-19 Pandemic Waves
Future Research Direction
Conclusions
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