Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

After curbing spread, Maha town sees case spike again

- Surendra P Gangan surendra.gangan@htlive.com

MUMBAI: After controllin­g the spread of Covid-19 in June, the textile town of Malegaon in Nashik district reported a spike in new cases over the past two weeks. While some suggested this indicates a “second wave”, experts and local administra­tion say the increased cases are due to the infection spreading beyond the areas of Malegaon that were initially afflicted by Covid-19.

Malegaon reported five cases and one death on April 10, and the local administra­tion responded quickly. On June 10, the tally of cases in Malegaon was 861 and the death toll was 65. On June 30, the tally rose to 1,087 and fatalities were at 81. With 226 cases and 16 deaths in 21 days, and the number of daily cases down to singledigi­t numbers, the ‘Malegaon model’ received applause from many quarters.

However, in the past two weeks, there has been a rise in the number of reported cases. As of August 16, Malegaon saw 623 new cases, with 35-40 new cases being recorded daily. Nitin Kapadnis, deputy commission­er of Malegaon Municipal Corporatio­n, said, “Cases have risen over the past few days and it will take at least four weeks to control, like we did in June.”

The positivity rate in Malegaon is more than 30%, compared to state’s 18-20%.

Dr Avinash Bhondve, president of the Maharashtr­a chapter of the Indian Medical Associatio­n (IMA), said Malegaon may be experienci­ng a “second wave”. “It is largely as per the global

The textile town has trade exchanges with Mumbai and other cities and it leads to the rapid movement of people. This too is a major reason for the resurgence

DR AMOL ANNADATE

trend witnessed in countries like New Zealand, Spain and because of complacenc­y. Not only Malegaon, the second wave may be witnessed in Mumbai if precaution­s are not taken,” he said.

Dr Amol Annadate, who has worked in Malegaon, said after the initial success, many locals have ignored distancing norms and personal hygiene requiremen­ts leading to the spike in cases. “The textile town has trade exchanges with Mumbai and other cities and it leads to the rapid movement of people. This too is a major reason for the resurgence,” he added.

Dr Abul Irfan Ansari, former principal of Malegaon’s Unani Medical College, said the numbers may reflect the infection spreading to the outskirts of the city. “It’s true that people here don’t follow the norms and a large chunk doesn’t even admit that the virus exists. But the areas where we witnessed the outbreak three months ago have developed antibodies and are unlikely to be infected again,” he said.

Kapadnis also refuted the notion of Malegaon facing a second wave of infection. “This surge is from the western part, where density is relatively low. We won’t call it the second wave as it has not relapsed in the eastern parts where it spread rapidly in May. We ramped up our infrastruc­ture and are testing 260 contacts a day.”

 ??  ?? Regular screening is key to avoiding a second wave in any area, according to experts. PRATIK CHORGE/HT
Regular screening is key to avoiding a second wave in any area, according to experts. PRATIK CHORGE/HT

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