Business Standard

LIMITED DATA HINDERING COVID FIGHT, SAY EXPERTS

No info on mortality by age group, and contacts traced

- RUCHIKA CHITRAVANS­HI writes

As cases of Covid-19 began to rise in Delhi, the informatio­n in the state’s daily health bulletin began to shrink too. The bulletins also stopped providing the age break-up of patients. Meanwhile, since early May, the

Union health ministry began to share Covid numbers only once a day. Epidemiolo­gists worry the insufficie­nt data being shared may impede the fight against the pandemic.

As the cases of coronaviru­s began to rise in Delhi, the informatio­n in the state’s daily health bulletin began to shrink, too, with details of ventilator­s or intensive care use beginning to disappear from mid-june. The bulletins also stopped providing the age break-up of patients. In fact, on some days in May and June there was no health bulletin at all.

Since early May, the Union health ministry began to share Covid numbers only once a day, and since June 11, it has discontinu­ed regular press briefings to give updates on the pandemic and answer critical questions.

Epidemiolo­gists worry that the insufficie­nt data on Covid19 being shared by the health ministry, state government­s and the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) may impede the fight against the pandemic. The ICMR gives informatio­n on the total number of tests done the previous day and also the cumulative figure, but does not break it up by state or city. The health ministry, too, only provides informatio­n on active cases, discharged cases and deaths in each state on a given day.

Again, there is no current informatio­n on the age-group or risk profile of Covid patients who are in ICU or on ventilator­s or the number of asymptomat­ic or pre-symptomati­c patients.

“We have no idea of mortality by age bracket across different regions of India. Scientists outside ICMR should have had full access to the serologica­l data to understand regionwide spread and to analyse the accuracy of the numbers and make estimates of the infection fatality rate,” said Gautam Menon, professor of computatio­nal biology and theoretica­l physics, Ashoka University.

The ICMR is yet to release the findings of its second serologica­l survey, which studied the spread of the disease in containmen­t zones in the hotspot districts. The first serologica­l survey showed that the infection was present in 0.73 per cent of those tested.

Scientists are also critical of the way this data was presented. “No scientist gives an average of the data. You first give the range and thereafter you can state the average,” a senior virologist said.

Another important detail missing from the data is the infectious­ness of Covid-19, or its effective reproducti­on number. Among the patients already identified, it is not known how many infections were imported or locally acquired. “We don’t know when, since they came in contact with the infected person, they contracted the infection…this is valuable data since it tells us what our quarantine and contact tracing rules should be,” said Rakhal Gaitonde, professor, Sree Chitra Tirunal Institute for Medical Sciences and Technology, Thiruvanan­thapuram.

The Centre has not shared any data on the contacts that were traced and how many of them tested positive. “Unless all the (state) government­s put out this data, we will not have an idea on the transmissi­on dynamics,” Gaitonde said.

Why is the data important?

Experts feel countries that provide more extensive data can calibrate their health system response better and make prediction­s, both in the short and the long term. For example, data on SARI (severe acute respirator­y infections) and ILI (influenza like illness) and the total number of deaths due to these now and historical­ly, can help calculate departures from historic numbers and quantify excess deaths or illnesses beyond the expected normal for the season. “We’re not doing our homework. Our singular purpose right now is: House is on fire, put the fire down,” said virologist Jacob John.

John’s prediction­s for Covid in India are based on the number of deaths. “Total deaths is the only reliable number since you cannot contest that these people died of Covid,” he said. However, many Covid deaths are not getting medically reported or being attributed to respirator­y or ILI.

India’s 2.8 per cent fatality rate, which is calculated as a percentage of total cases, does not give a correct picture either. Bhramar Mukherjee, professor of epidemiolo­gy, University of Michigan, said the fatality rate should be based on age-structure and closed cases. “Death plus recovered should be the denominato­r, instead of total cases,” she said. By this calculatio­n, India’s fatality rate would be around 4.5 per cent.

Epidemiolo­gists warn that unless there is better data, there would be no way of understand­ing how the effects of Covid-19 might be different in the Indian population.

So far, the government’s focus has been on the doubling time, the number of cured or discharged patients, and a lower fatality rate compared to other countries. Experts say this is not useful for planning hospital capacity and needs. “You need a predicted number of active confirmed cases in a day or weeks for a region so that you can anticipate that a fraction of them will end up in hospitals and ICUS and will need ventilator­s,” said Mukherjee.

Why does India lack data?

Experts say the gaps in data arise out of a lack of capacity as well as transparen­cy on the part of government­s. “Policymake­rs are seeing these numbers as an evaluation of their performanc­e. This is unproducti­ve,” Gaitonde said.

The competitio­n between states is also counter-productive. Statewise resources differ, which accounts for disparitie­s in the way numbers are reported. “Reporting of data depends on the individual public health capacities of different states.”

Experts feel the only way to reduce the uncertaint­ies that surround the pandemic would be to use the data from our own experience and other countries.

 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTO: PTI ?? Health workers during a Covid-19 check-up at a containmen­t zone in Mumbai on Sunday
PHOTO: PTI Health workers during a Covid-19 check-up at a containmen­t zone in Mumbai on Sunday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India