Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Govt okays home, hotel isolation for milder patients

- Rhythma Kaul letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Coronaviru­s disease patients with mild symptoms can stay in hotels and service apartments in case they don’t have space in their own residences to confine themselves in isolation, according to the Union health ministry’s revised guidelines on home quarantine for Covid-19 patients.

The facility can be offered on paid basis as is being done by certain states for travellers and contacts of covid-19 cases. The price can be pre-decided by state government­s. “There are large number of facilities such as hotels, service apartments, lodges which remain unoccupied due to impact of Covid-19 on travel and tourism. There are also instances where people who don’t have requisite space at home may opt for such facilities. This is likely to reduce the pressure on the family, give comfort to the person, and protect the family members and immediate neighborho­od,” read the health ministry guidelines.

The ministry has issued standard operating procedures that are applicable both for facility quarantine, facility isolation in hotels, service apartments, lodges etc. “It is an extension of health ministry’s earlier guidelines on home quarantine for positive patients. Since about 80% positive cases have mild symptoms they do not really require to be in a hospital, and many people do not have adequate space in their homes to be able to successful­ly isolate themselves, for such people it was decided to allow them to use private facilities. Earlier also hotels, lodges, hostels etc have served as quarantine­d centres, it will be the same with extra precaution­s,” said an official from the health ministry, requesting anonymity.

It will be states’ responsibi­lity to ensure that the quarantine and isolation facility will not co-exist.

These facilities will offer single room on paid basis to contacts, cases with attached washrooms.

“The facility dedicated for isolation will follow the norms establishe­d for COVID Care Centre as available. The cases shall be kept in an isolation facility, if the cases are clinically assessed to be pre-symptomati­c or very mild. Such facility that opts for isolation will have separate earmarked areas for keeping suspect cases and confirmed cases and will ensure no inter-mingling of these two categories,” the guidelines further reads.

The facility owner will have to make additional arrangemen­ts for an in-house trained doctor and a nurse on 24X7 basis. The doctor will monitor the contacts, cases in quarantine, isolation facilities once a day on basic parameters of temperatur­e, pulse, blood pressure, respirator­y rate and pulse oxymetre and keep record of the same.

The doctor engaged by the facility will inform the District Surveillan­ce Officer regarding the list of admitted cases or contacts, and their health status. The facility should network with an approved laboratory for testing samples as per ICMR guidelines. The patients should not be allowed to meet visitors. However, they can talk on phone. The facility will provide Wi-Fi facility and ensure that the client downloads the Aarogya Setu App.

Experts say as long as the protocol is followed, there is no harm in home or facility isolation of mild cases. “I am a big believer of home isolation as at least 90% of the cases, according to me are mild enough to not require hospitaliz­ation. As long precaution­s are taken, it is a good idea,” said T Jacob John, senior virologist.

THE FACILITY CAN BE OFFERED ON PAID BASIS AS IS BEING DONE BY CERTAIN STATES FOR TRAVELLERS AND CONTACTS OF COVID-19 CASES

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