FrontLine

Kerala: Fear over the cities

- BY R. KRISHNAKUM­AR IN THIRUVANAN­THAPURAM

As “triple lockdowns” and community quarantine­s increase in Kerala, the question is whether the State is finally seeing community transmissi­on.

MORE THAN 200 COVID19 POSITIVE CASES every day—that is the new normal in Kerala.

The State has so far managed to keep the caseload low, delay the spread of infection and keep the pressure on health facilities down. It reported just over 5,000 cases and 27 deaths in the ve months since the rst COVID case came to light in the last week of January. But a rising trend has been evident in recent weeks. On July 7, for instance, the State saw 272 new cases, the highest for a day until then.

Cases of local transmissi­on of COVID19 are increasing steadily. Hotspots are mushroomin­g where it is no longer possible to identify all infectious individual­s and their contacts. Communityw­ide containmen­t measures are being announced everywhere.

All of a sudden, by the rst week of July, there were over 100 positive cases in which the source of infection could not be traced immediatel­y. Such cases are being reported from all districts, and is notably high in Malappuram, Thiruvanan­thapuram, Ernakulam and Kannur districts.

The State government is warning people to be “extremely vigilant” if things are not to go “out of hand”. But it maintains that there is no evidence of community transmissi­on, yet.

A grave situation seems to be developing in cities that have huge oating population­s and daily commuters and in congested “ruralurban” areas where a large number of people go to cities for work or business and where the concentrat­ion of expatriate­s who have come back from various parts of the world is high.

TRIPLE LOCKDOWN IN THE CAPITAL

The worsening scene in the capital city, Thiruvanan­thapuram, was brought into focus on July 5 by the Minister in charge of the district, Kadakampal­ly

Surendran, who described it as “a city sitting atop a volcano”. Days ahead of that, several wards in the Corporatio­n area had been declared as “containmen­t zones”, as clusters of people turning COVID positive began to be reported one after the other.

On July 5, as many as 27 positive cases were reported in the city, of which 22 were through local transmissi­on. Two days later, when the city reported 54 new cases, 47 of them were those involving local transmissi­on. It was the rst time that the city was reporting transmissi­on of cases beyond family members, number of local transmissi­on cases exceeding the number of imported cases, an increase in containmen­t zones and local clusters, and “supersprea­ding events”—those involving people who routinely engaged with the general public turning positive and transmitti­ng the infection to many “contacts”.

Soon the situation turned so bad that the government put Thiruvanan­thapuram under “triple lockdown”, a fancy term to indicate major restrictio­n of movement of people in the entire district, within specic localities, and inside homes. The State Secretaria­t was shut down. The Chief Minister announced that he would be working from home during the weeklong lockdown.

The situation in Kochi, the business capital of the State, and Kannur, a burgeoning but congested urban centre, was no different. In Malappuram, another red spot, several panchayats within the coastal taluk of Ponnani were put under “triple lockdown” for a week until July 6.

The restrictio­ns were announced after tests conducted as part of a sentinel surveillan­ce effort found 10 persons, including two doctors and three nurses of two private, NONCOVID hospitals, testing positive for COVID19. Both hospitals were closed for a while, a measure that invited some criticism later, but the lists of contacts of the two doctors who were asymptomat­ic throughout were quite long.

An area of concern for the authoritie­s is the string of coastal villages in the State, where the density of population is one of the highest in India. The number of cases reported in a single day (July 6) from Poonthura, a coastal village near Thiruvanan­thapuram, was 26. The next day over 60 samples tested positive there, a lot of them of people who also had visited a nearby market, closer to the heart of the city.

Another worry was the rise in number of “supersprea­ding” events in crowded urban centres that saw movement of people to and from other places as part of their official, business or medical needs.

From the last week of June, several such cases of vendors in markets, food delivery boys, wholesale cigarette sellers, provision store owners/employees, sh sellers, personnel on security duty (even before the Secretaria­t), paramilita­ry personnel, medical representa­tives and health workers had been identied as the nucleus of small and large clusters. The contacts’ list at times ran into hundreds.

Areas where these clusters had formed were routinely isolated, widespread tests conducted, and surroundin­g areas put under surveillan­ce. But fresh clusters were forming in many nearby places.

WORRYING SIGNS

The State unit of the Indian Medical Associatio­n (IMA) has for some time been saying that community transmissi­on is already a reality in Kerala and that the government must acknowledg­e it. IMA representa­tives say that the increase in the number of cases with no known source of infection, patients with no symptoms, health workers in NONCOVID hospitals turning positive, and transmissi­on of cases being reported in places such as markets are all worrying signs that Kerala needs to take into account urgently.

To support its argument, the organisati­on has also pointed out instances of people who have returned to the State with no symptoms turning positive later on; of health workers who have had no contact with COVID19 patients testing positive; of Keralites who left the State testing positive in other States (a propositio­n challenged by the State Health Department through a study).

Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan said: “Even though there is need for heightened vigil, we need to understand that so far in only 2 per cent of the cases does the source of infection remain unknown, while the allindia average is around 40 per cent. However, if we do not bring the situation under control immediatel­y, it will surely lead to a situation of community transmissi­on. That is why we have announced lockdowns in many places even before it reached a point of community spread.”

Meanwhile, the State government has made regulation­s under the Kerala Epidemic Diseases Ordinance 2020 applicable in cases involving violation of containmen­t guidelines; making wearing of face masks and social distancing norms mandatory for a year; and prohibitin­g mass gatherings and spitting in public places. Violators will have to pay a ne of up to Rs.10,000 and/or undergo a jail term of up to two years.

With the State experienci­ng a shortage of manpower to ght COVID, the government announced that its ofces would work with only 50 per cent staff and the rest would be reserved to ght the pandemic, for instance, in rst line COVID treatment centres and quarantine centres.

As the number of locally transmitte­d cases rises, the rate of secondary and tertiary transmissi­on is of grave concern. So are the increasing instances of infection among medical workers, shortage of testing kits, and delay in publishing test results that leads to delayed containmen­t of infected people. An important issue the IMA and others have raised is the need to increase the number of tests done in the State.

As instances of triple lockdowns and community quarantine­s increase, the focus surely is on whether the State is nally seeing wide community transmissi­on and how much is the virus spreading undetected. Meanwhile, the severe economic impact of the pandemic and repeated lockdowns on the people remain submerged, at least for now. m

 ??  ?? THE KERALA STATE SECRETARIA­T locked following the “triple lockdown” in Thiruvanan­thapuram on July 6.
THE KERALA STATE SECRETARIA­T locked following the “triple lockdown” in Thiruvanan­thapuram on July 6.

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