Deccan Chronicle

Covid crisis far from over: Scientists

Noted epidemiolo­gist says India has a hidden epidemic in many parts which have weak health systems

-

New Delhi, Sept. 24: From 500 cases to 57 lakh. Six months after a nationwide lockdown, Covid-19 is spreading fast across the length and breadth of India with more testing and developmen­ts on the vaccine front but no clarity on when the disease will be controlled, say scientists.

On March 24, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced a 21-day lockdown for the entire country, stating it was the only way to break the chain of infection. At the time, the number of people infected with the SARS-CoV-2 virus was a little over 500 and the death toll 12.

Six months on, India has the second highest number of cases in the world after the US with a tally of

57.32 lakh cases, 86,508 people testing positive in a day and a total of 91,149 fatalities, according to Union health ministry figures on Thursday.

As Covid-19 rages — and even laypersons get conversant with the complexiti­es of RT-PCR tests versus the cheaper but not so reliable rapid antigen tests — US-based economist and epidemiolo­gist Ramanan Laxminaray­an said there is a hidden epidemic happening even as the pandemic spreads.

He noted that the infection is spreading widely across all parts of the country, including into rural India, although the visibility is lower in places where testing is weak or inadequate.

“We will likely see some increases in states like UP and Bihar but only if RTPCR testing increases. Right now, we have a hidden epidemic in many parts of the country which have weak health systems, the director of the Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics & Policy in Washington said.

While the infection is spreading at a slower rate than if people were not taking precaution­s, it is definitely not under control, Laxminaray­an added.

However, he expects the number of cases to start coming down in the next month or two as India approaches some sense of population immunity. As a substantia­l number of the population is infected and recovers from the disease, they are unlikely to spread the virus.

Given the precaution­s that are being taken both by the government and individual­s, the epidemic has slowed down. This would mean that we would see a sustained plateau for a while before the cases start coming down, Laxminaray­an said.

On March 23, a day before the Prime Minister announced the lockdown and two days before it came into force, India had tested 18,383 samples. Till September 22, this had gone up to at least

6,62,79,462 tests, both RTPCR and rapid antigen.

The recoveries have gone up to over 46 lakh people,

pushing the recovery rate to cent.

Immunologi­st Satyajit Rath sounded a note of caution and said India is still at the stage of spreading viral infection across communitie­s.

With global, internatio­nal travel as the point of origin, the infection was first establishe­d in urban high-density localities, and is now spreading from those into the rest of the country, at widely varied speeds, Rath, from the National Institute of Immunology (NII) in New Delhi, said.

The infection has never really been under control in India, he said.

The early harsh prolonged lockdown somewhat delayed the largescale establishm­ent of the infection. But ‘control’ has never been a possibilit­y. So we are certainly going to see growth in the infection numbers for quite a long while yet, Rath added.

Immunologi­st Vineeta Bal concurred with Rath, saying the Indian government did not learn much despite experience­s from other parts of the world and announced complete draconian lockdowns that were extended for long periods.

Leadership in the country lacked in its vision and could not get a sense of the ground realities for poor people; or maybe did not care, Bal, from Pune’s Indian Institute of Science, Education and Research, said.

Because of major underminin­g of public health infrastruc­ture for decades, our epidemic handling preparedne­ss was very, very poor. That could have been the only justifiabl­e reason for imposing the lockdown, Bal added.

national 81.55 per

Laxminaray­an took a different view. He said there were many positives about the control strategy, including an early recognitio­n of the threat faced by India, and an early lock

down though the implementa­tion and planning could have been much better.

The lack of early testing really cost the country. With better and more expanded testing early on, that India was fully capable of, the lockdown could have been more targeted rather than been nationwide.

 ?? —PTI ?? Visitors get a selfie clicked at Bara Imambara in Lucknow on Thursday as the monument reopens after a gap of more than six months owing to Coronaviru­s related lockdown.
—PTI Visitors get a selfie clicked at Bara Imambara in Lucknow on Thursday as the monument reopens after a gap of more than six months owing to Coronaviru­s related lockdown.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India