Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Ministers takes stock, says no community spread in India

- Rhythma Kaul rhythm.kaul@htlive.com

NEW DELHI : A group of ministers (GoM) headed by Union health minister Harsh Vardhan held a review meeting on Tuesday, discussing the strategies India has formulated to fight the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19) and identifyin­g possible loopholes in implementa­tion.

In the 14th meeting of the group since February, a presentati­on on the Covid-19 cases globally and within the country was made, according to a health ministry statement.

“The Group of Ministers had in-depth deliberati­on on containmen­t strategy and management aspects of Covid-19, as well as the measures being taken by the Centre and various States,” the statement said.

Civil aviation minister Hardeep S Puri, foreign minister S Jaishankar, MoS home Nityanand Rai, MoS health and family welfare Ashwini Kumar Choubey, chief of defence staff Bipin Rawat, and Union home secretary Ajay Kumar Bhalla were present at the meeting.

Separately, speaking to news agency PTI, Vardhan said India has so far been able to stave off community transmissi­on of Covid-19. Community transmissi­on takes place when a person tests positive for the disease but doctors are not able to trace the source of the infection. It indicates undiagnose­d and asymptomat­ic people are unknowingl­y spreading the infection, which makes it difficult to break the chain of transmissi­on.

“By now we know that fighting coronaviru­s is no rocket science. If behavioura­l changes such as hand, environmen­tal and respirator­y hygiene, which are being practised more rigorously during this period, get imbibed in society it will become the new normal,” Vardhan said.

“Once the havoc caused by the virus subsides and the crisis blows over, people may remember it as a blessing in disguise,” Vardhan added.

At the GoM meeting, measures pertaining to strengthen­ing health care capacity of states, including devoting adequate resources for creating dedicated Covid-19 hospitals, and equipping medical facilities with adequate personal protection equipment (PPE) kits, ventilator­s and other essential equipment were discussed.

The health ministry statement said the GoM “highlighte­d the need for ensuring that stringent measures of quality control were taken for PPE kits, masks, ventilator­s etc”.

“Random batch sampling for ensuring compliance and adherence to the quality standards laid down were also needed,” it added. The production of essential medical equipment in India has seen a significan­t growth with domestic manufactur­ers reaching the production capacity of nearly 250,000 PPE kits and about 200,000 N-95 masks per day.

Once the havoc caused by the virus subsides and the crisis blows over, people may remember it as a blessing in disguise.

HARSH VARDHAN,

Union health minister

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