Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

INDIA’S ACTIVE CASES GO PAST TWO MN MARK

Country records grim landmark as active cases reach 2,030,725, over 770k active cases added in last week

- Jamie Mullick letters@hindustant­imes.com

The number of active cases in India on Monday crossed the two million mark as the mammoth surge of new infections continued to push the overburden­ed health care system to limits, with reports emerging from across the country of hospitals running out of ICU beds, and crucial supplies such as oxygen cylinders.

The latest in the series of grim landmarks for the country comes only 10 days after active cases in the country crossed the 1 million active cases mark on April 10. As of Monday night, there were a total of 2,030,725 active cases across the country, the highest active caseload ever recorded in India since the start of the outbreak in March last year, according to HT’s Covid-19 dashboard.

The number of active cases in India on Monday crossed the two million mark as the mammoth surge of new infections continued to push the overburden­ed health care system to limits, with reports emerging from across the country of hospitals running out of ICU beds, and crucial supplies such as oxygen cylinders.

The latest in the series of grim landmarks for the country comes only 10 days after active cases in the country crossed the 1 million active cases mark on April 10.

As of Monday night, there were a total of 2,030,725 active cases across the country, the highest active caseload ever recorded in India since the start of the outbreak in March last year, according to HT’s Covid-19 dashboard.

For the third day running, India’s daily case tally remained above the quarter million mark as 256,596 new cases were reported, while a record 1,757 daily deaths were lodged. India’s overall caseload has now reached 15.3 million – the second-highest after the United States – and 154,320 people have lost their lives to the disease, according to HT’s dashboard.

Active cases – those Covid-19 patients still carrying the virus, and thus under treatment – is a crucial metric representi­ng the country’s battle against the disease because it directly reflects the pressure on the health care system in a region.

While the total number of active cases is alarming, the rate at which this number is rising is even more so. In the past week, the country has added nearly 770,000 active cases to its tally.

When the first wave of the Covid-19 outbreak was raging at its peak, India’s active cases only hovered over the 1 million mark briefly (for a period of five days between September 15 and September 20 last year).

This means that the current active caseload, and by extension the burden on the country’s hospitals and nursing homes, is more than double what the country saw even during the peak for the first wave.

This also makes India only the second country after the US to have more than 2 million active cases at any given point of time.

In Brazil, which is the world’s third worst-hit country, active cases topped out at 1.3 million two weeks ago, and appear to be on dropping now.

To be sure, there are currently 6.9 million active cases in the US, where it touched a peak of 9.1 million in late January, when the country’s third wave was at its peak.

The metric is even more crucial in current circumstan­ces because the country’s health care system is being weighed down by cases, particular­ly in regions that have massive chunks of active cases such as Maharashtr­a, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat and Delhi, many of which have been reporting not only shortage of supplies such as oxygen tanks, but are also running out of ICU beds, and even space in morgues and funeral homes.

One of the major reasons to have caused an acute area-specific shortage of life-saving supplies is the uneven distributi­on of the active cases in the country. Maharashtr­a, for instance, is home to only 9% of the country’s population, but is currently bearing the load of one of every three (33.4%) active cases in India. The western state, the worst-hit by Covid-19, had 678,198 active cases as of Monday night.

Just the top 10 states by active cases are responsibl­e for over 80% of all such cases.

Uttar Pradesh had 208,523 active cases (10% of the country’s caseload), Karnataka 142,084 (7%), Chhattisga­rh 129,000 active cases (6.4%) and Kerala with 103,327 active cases (5.1%) made the top five along with Mahrashtra.

Delhi, which is home to 0.3% of the country’s population, has 3.8% of India active cases – 76,887.

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