Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Community transmissi­on debate continues

- Sanchita Sharma

NEWDELHI: The Union health ministry clarified on Monday that community transmissi­on of Covid-19 hadn’t yet begun in India, a day after signalling the onset of “limited community transmissi­on” of the disease. The ministry said limited community transmissi­on isn’t the same as community transmissi­on -- Stage 3 of infectious diseases such as the one caused by the SARS-COV-2 virus.

“Limited community transmissi­on means where a more than one person has acquired, directly or indirectly, infection from the same source. Community transmissi­on of alarming proportion­s has not been seen in India yet. There is nothing to hide...if we get evidence of largescale community transmissi­on, where the source of transmissi­on is not known, we will declare it. As of now there’s no community transmissi­on in India,” said Lav Aggarwal, joint secretary in the health ministry.

Later, India’s health minister Dr Harsh Vardhan tweeted: “Today, related to #Coronaviru­s, the @Mohfw_india (ministry of health and family welfare) made it clear that its spread has not reached the community transmissi­on level yet and its transmissi­on is still in the local phase. “

In Stage 3, the source of a patient’s infection cannot be traced and isolated.

India has reported 1,308 cases and 32 deaths due to Covid-19. On Monday, 25 new cases were identified in Delhi, of which 18 cases were in one cluster, Nizamuddin.

There are four main stages of the disease outbreak. Stage 1 is usually when cases are imported and are not of local origin. Stage 2 is when there is local transmissi­on, which means a section of people testing positive have come in contact with a positive patient having a travel history. Stage 3 is community transmissi­on. Stage 4 is an epidemic.

The Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), tasked with containing the pandemic, has maintained that India is still in Stage 2, despite the number of cases of people with no known contact with an infected person or travel history rising over the past week. Community transmissi­on happens when the source of infection is untraced and the patient has no travel history or known contact with a confirmed Covid-19 case.it indicates that undiagnose­d cases are infecting others, which is when infection clusters spiral out of control and turn into epidemics.

A senior public health expert, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said: “We’ve had pockets of community transmissi­on in several locations in half-adozen states, but now the number of people with untraceabl­e infection is increasing, which is a sign that community transmissi­on has begun.”

According to T Jacob John, head of the department of clinical virology and microbiolo­gy at Christian Medical College, Vellore, community transmissi­on in India began in mid-february.

“Instead of splitting hairs, the focus should be on preparing to be three steps ahead of the virus. It’s not a cops and robbers game, we should not be fooled into reacting to the virus but should be fooling the virus by anticipati­ng the curve and proactivel­y deciding what we need to do stop the spread,” said John, emeritus medical scientist, ICMR.

The US Centers for Disease Control declared its first case of a person in California with no relevant travel history or exposure to another known patient asa “possible instance of community spread of Covid-19 in the United States” on February 26.

 ?? PRATIK CHORGE/HT ?? Migrant workers, who were unable to return to their states, rest under the flyover next to the railway track near Lokmanya Tilak Terminus in Mumbai on Monday.
PRATIK CHORGE/HT Migrant workers, who were unable to return to their states, rest under the flyover next to the railway track near Lokmanya Tilak Terminus in Mumbai on Monday.

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