Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Early diagnosis is the key to controllin­g zika

It will test the country’s newly establishe­d outbreak-response preparedne­ss

-

How quickly India contains its biggest ever zika virus outbreak, which has so far infected 80 people in Jaipur, is a test for the country’s newly establishe­d outbreakre­sponse preparedne­ss that screens humans and animals for viruses such as Avian influenza, H1N1, zika and Nipah. Following the H1N1 pandemic that spread to 74 countries across five continents within three months of the virus being identified in central Mexico in April 2009, India set out to decentrali­se its diagnostic capabiliti­es from two overburden­ed labs to every region.

Four years ago, all outbreaks of unknown aetiology were tested at the National Institute of Virology in Pune and the National Centre for Disease Control in New Delhi, resulting in backlogs and delays. Realising the imperative of rapid diagnosis of outbreaks and continuous monitoring of existing and new virus strains, the Centre gave its nod to setting up a chain of Virus Research & Diagnostic Laboratori­es across India in June, 2013. Diagnosis, however, can go just that far. Quarantini­ng patients to ensure mosquitoes that feed on their infected blood do not spread the disease and tracking people for fever in a 3-km radius of patient zero are the first steps in rapid containmen­t. The giant leap is sanitising the neighbourh­ood of both adult mosquitoes and their larvae to break the cycle of mosquito breeding by breaking the incubation period of the virus.

Zika, which has been reported in 86 countries, was first reported in India with three cases in Ahmedabad in February, 2017, followed by one case in Krishnagir­i in Tamil Nadu in July. The infection causes flu-like symptoms in healthy people, but it is deadly for pregnant women as it puts their unborn children at risk of microcepha­ly. Each year, 26 million babies are born in India, of which one in five (21.1%) are not born in a clinic or hospital, according to National Family Health Survey (NFHS-4). If zika becomes endemic in underserve­d areas, thousands of babies will be at risk of subnormal brain developmen­t. Containmen­t efforts over the next week will determine how the outbreak shapes up, not just in Jaipur, but in all of India.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India