China Daily

CHALLENGES REMAIN, BUT SIGNS OF HOPE EMERGE IN INDIA

Medical supplies obtained from Chinese companies

- By ARUNAVA DAS

More than 1.3 billion people in India remain confined at home since the imposition of a national lockdown on March 25 to fight the COVID-19 pandemic.

While this is tough for anyone, it is especially so for those living in Asia’s largest slum — Dharavi — in

Mumbai, the country’s financial capital. The city’s slums are home to an estimated 65 percent of the population of about 12 million in Mumbai’s inner-city area.

Spread over 2.1 square kilometers, Dharavi is home to more than 700,000 people.

Shahid Jameel, a virologist and CEO of the DBT/Wellcome Trust India Alliance, an independen­t charity organizati­on based in New Delhi that funds health and biomedical sciences research, said: “We have advised people to keep 6 feet, or 1.8 meters, apart, but how is that possible in urban slums?

These are places to watch. I am really worried.”

As in many other parts of the world, schools and colleges are closed, exams have been suspended, courts and most offices and factories are shut, and nearly all forms of transporta­tion have been halted.

Only doctors, nurses, healthcare support employees and those working to keep essential services running are allowed out of their homes — but under strict safety protocols.

Sunita Narain, director-general of the Centre for Science and Environmen­t in New Delhi, said there is no rulebook to tell government­s what to do, how to shut down economies, and when to reopen them.

“COVID-19 is the most tumultuous, most catastroph­ic and the most defining epoch of our lifetime. One cannot think of anything else that has happened with such speed — from the end of December, when the first cases were reported in China, to now,” she said.

“This is an extraordin­ary situation that the entire country is grappling with.”

Debabrata Mitra, a doctor, said, “Such is the scale of the virus’ impact — and the unpredicta­bility of the harm it can do to humans, economies and society — that we do not really know yet what we must do.

“About 70 percent to 80 percent of patients are asymptomat­ic — which means they are potent carriers of the virus. That is very worrying,” he added.

Another concern is that scores of people with severe diseases, including cancer, are not getting urgent and adequate medical attention in such challengin­g times.

With the number of infections and deaths mounting, many wards in Indian hospitals — both government and private — have been converted into coronaviru­s units.

Cases of doctors and nurses becoming infected with the virus are rising daily. “Worse, they face being socially ostracized despite trying their best with limited resources,” Mitra said.

Maharashtr­a, a business hub with high-density population­s in urban areas, has reported the most cases in India.

Jameel said, “However, now the situation in states such as Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat is also not looking good.”

Breeding ground

Poverty-stricken slum-dwellers live amid poor sanitation and have low health awareness.

At the best of times, Dharavi is a breeding ground for disease, with clusters of houses lining a maze of narrow alleyways, many of them next to a huge open drain that runs through the area.

This community poses one of the biggest challenges to the Maharashtr­a government and the municipal authoritie­s in Mumbai as they try to contain the virus.

By Tuesday, Maharashtr­a had reported 14,541 confirmed COVID19 cases and 583 deaths from the disease. As of Monday, Dharavi had 632 reported cases.

To make matters worse, many people have ignored the lockdown, preferring to venture outdoors, rather than remain in crowded rooms.

A form of paranoia has set in among those stuck at home, as the lockdown threatens the Indian economy and people’s livelihood­s. Even so, imposing it was the only logical step.

Archana Majumdar, a senior doctor with the Ministry of Health and

Family Welfare’s Central Health Services, said, “It is the only way to put the brakes on the spread of the deadly virus, which has claimed thousands of lives worldwide.

“In view of the high population density, especially in cities, we must all strictly follow lockdown protocols. There are no two ways about it.”

The number of coronaviru­s infections in India could soar in the next two months if preventive measures, including isolation and social distancing, are not followed strictly, she said, adding that aggressive action is needed to test as many people as possible, as well as to isolate and treat those who become infected.

“Things are getting better as far as awareness is concerned,” but unless the country is united in following safety measures, the situation could still get out of hand, Majumdar said.

She added that there is an urgent need to obtain rapid testing kits. These can be used in hotspots and containmen­t areas, as well as in places that are reportedly free of the virus.

To combat the outbreak, India is continuing to import medical supplies from China.

India’s Ministry of External Affairs said in a statement late last month, “In the past two weeks, around two dozen flights have departed for India from five cities in China, carrying nearly 400 metric tons of medical supplies.”

Ministry spokesman Anurag Srivastava was quoted by Indian media as saying that flights were likely to be stepped up considerab­ly in the next few months as efforts to obtain medical supplies gain momentum.

He said two Chinese companies, Guangzhou Wondfo Biotech, in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, and Zhuhai Livzon Diagnostic­s in Zhuhai, Guangdong, have supplied a batch of test kits to India, with the former sending 300,000 kits and the latter 250,000.

India has ordered 3.7 million rapid antibody test kits from companies based in China, South Korea and Singapore, Srivastava said.

It is likely that the number of infections will continue to rise as testing increases, even though the lockdown has lowered the transmissi­on rate. Given the limited testing carried out in India to date, it is too early to say whether the current rate of infection will be sustained, rise or fall.

Millions of migrant workers and local daily wage earners are among those worst hit by the lockdown.

They have found themselves trapped in a situation where they can neither find work nor return to their villages. Nearly all the stranded migrant workers nationwide have exhausted their meager savings and are now dependent on community kitchens run by government or nongovernm­ental organizati­ons.

These migrants comprise about

20 percent of the country’s workforce.

Just before the lockdown was enforced, Manas Mondal, 21, lost his job as a guard at an informatio­n technology office in Bengaluru, Karnataka, and returned to his village in West Bengal, some 1,900 kilometers away. He said he is scared of going back to Bengaluru, adding, “I will try to do something at home.”

For him and many others, the outbreak came as a shock. However, there is hope and the authoritie­s are continuing to take action.

The government has earmarked some 170 virus hotspots based on testing, occurrence of cases and contacts.

Jameel, the virologist, said: “The other obvious places are large cities, especially urban slums. These have the disadvanta­ges of being close to places where the virus was initially imported, and a high population density, making social distancing impractica­l.”

Measures that are needed urgently include isolating cases, speeding up contact tracing, quarantine precaution­s and using rapid antibody tests in areas with highdensit­y population­s, Jameel said, adding, “Urban slums must be top priority.”

While West Bengal and Karnataka are focusing on getting food and medicines to the needy and the elderly, the authoritie­s in Odisha are paying special attention to honoring those treating coronaviru­s patients.

With many cases of infection reported among doctors and other healthcare workers, the Odisha government said, The “corona warriors” who die while treating COVID19 patients will be treated as martyrs.”

Worst-hit workers

 ?? RUPAK DE CHOWDHURI / REUTERS ?? A temporary quarantine center is set up in Kolkata, India, during the nationwide lockdown to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s.
RUPAK DE CHOWDHURI / REUTERS A temporary quarantine center is set up in Kolkata, India, during the nationwide lockdown to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s.
 ?? From top: FRANCIS MASCARENHA­S / REUTERS the slum area. RAJANISH KAKADE / AP FRANCIS MASCARENHA­S / REUTERS XINHUA ?? Children wait to receive free food in a slum area of Mumbai last month. A makeshift barricade prevents entry to an alleyway in the Mumbai slum area of Dharavi. Disinfecti­on work is carried out in Dharavi. Medical workers talk with residents in
From top: FRANCIS MASCARENHA­S / REUTERS the slum area. RAJANISH KAKADE / AP FRANCIS MASCARENHA­S / REUTERS XINHUA Children wait to receive free food in a slum area of Mumbai last month. A makeshift barricade prevents entry to an alleyway in the Mumbai slum area of Dharavi. Disinfecti­on work is carried out in Dharavi. Medical workers talk with residents in
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