Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Bengal woman jumps quarantine, infects four others

Authoritie­s struggle to trace contact histories of patients who flouted rules, took public transport

- Snigdhendu Bhattachar­ya, Joydeep Thakur & Yogesh Joshi ■ letters@hindustant­imes.com

KOLKATA: A 29-year-old woman who was asked to stay in quarantine at home, but violated the instructio­ns and travelled by two trains from New Delhi to reach Tehatta, about 170km north of Kolkata, has tested positive for Covid-19. So have her sixyear-old son and nine-month-old daughter, and two relatives.

A 29-year-old woman, who was asked to stay in quarantine at home but violated the instructio­ns and travelled by two trains from New Delhi to reach West Bengal’s Tehatta, has tested positive for Covid-19 along with her four family members and mounted concerns about super-spreaders of the infection.

What has complicate­d matters is that the people who came in contact with the family are refusing to admit they did so. The district administra­tion has appealed to the local residents to voluntaril­y disclose whether they came in contact with the family so that it could put in place measures to prevent the spread of the disease.

A health official said the 29-year-old had on March 16 met a cousin in New Delhi, who had returned from the UK, following which she was advised to stay in-home quarantine.

The five were at their relative’s place in Tehatta between March 20 and 24 until being hospitalis­ed after reporting symptoms of Covid-19.

A number of the family’s relatives living in Tehatta have been isolated and their blood samples sent for tests. The results are awaited.

Ajay Chakrabort­y, director of health services, said the Delhi police should have informed them about the 29-year-old’s violation of the quarantine instructio­ns.

In Maharashtr­a’s Sangli, four members of a family, who have tested Covid-19 positive, had returned from Saudi Arabia on March 14 and mingled with other people for the four days in absence of instructio­ns for home quarantine.

Sangli district collector Abhijeet Chaudhari said the four were not on the list of people shared with them with foreign travel history.

“We got to know about the foreign visit of this family locally following which we collected their swabs for testing even as none of the four showed any symptoms,” said Chaudhari.

On March 22, the four tested positive and prompted the administra­tion to put at least 47 people under home quarantine. “Of the 47 samples collected, 24 tested positive and rest negative. Considerin­g that the positive cases who did not go to Mecca [Saudi Arabia] may have also come in contact with other relatives, we home quarantine­d around 300 and are monitoring them,” said Chaudhari.

Maharashtr­a minister Jayant Patil said they have put in place a containmen­t programme under which only one person from one family is being allowed to step out for buying essentials.

Around 500 families have been notified to stay at home and the city administra­tion has to ensure supply of essentials for them. The entry and exit points to the city have been sealed.

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