The Province

Infections hit India’s big cities hard

-

NEW DELHI — India reported over 17,000 new coronaviru­s cases over the last 24 hours, pushing the country’s total above 500,000, federal health ministry data showed on Saturday, with infections surging in major cities including the capital New Delhi.

India has the world’s fourth-biggest outbreak of the virus that causes COVID-19, below only the United States, Brazil and Russia in confirmed infections, according to a Reuters tally.

Infections are expected to continue rising steadily in

India. Experts advising the federal government say the authoritie­s should now prioritize reducing mortality over containing the spread of the virus.

“Our focus should be on preventing deaths and not really getting bogged down because of the numbers. Numbers are going to increase,” said Dr Manoj Murhekar, a member of India’s main coronaviru­s task force and director of the National Institute of Epidemiolo­gy.

The COV-IND-19 study group, led by Bhramar Mukherjee,

a biostatist­ics professor from the University of Michigan, forecasts that India could see between 770,000 and 925,000 cases by July 15.

As infections mount swiftly and hospitals become stretched, some cities like New Delhi are scrambling to build temporary facilities with thousands of beds to quarantine and treat COVID-19 patients.

The city of around 20 million people only has around 13,200 beds for COVID-19 patients and will add at least 20,000 in coming weeks, with some facilities manned by military doctors.

Staff shortages are likely to be a concern as hospitals are swamped and more temporary facilities open, experts warn, although health authoritie­s in some Indian cities are pushing for improved riskbased categorisa­tion of patients.

“We have to ensure those who really require treatment aren’t denied services,” said Dr Giridhar R. Babu, an epidemiolo­gist at the Public Health Foundation of India who is advising the southern state of Karnataka.

 ?? — RAFIQ MAQBOOL/AP ?? A health worker checks a person’s temperatur­e as others await their turn in a slum in Mumbai, India, yesterday. India is the fourth hardest-hit country by the COVID-19 pandemic in the world after the U.S., Russia and Brazil.
— RAFIQ MAQBOOL/AP A health worker checks a person’s temperatur­e as others await their turn in a slum in Mumbai, India, yesterday. India is the fourth hardest-hit country by the COVID-19 pandemic in the world after the U.S., Russia and Brazil.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada