Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

Eleven states told to increase testing, create more containmen­t zones

- HT Correspond­ent

NEW DELHI: The Centre on Friday told 11 states that are reporting a surge in Covid-19 cases to continuous­ly increase testing to bring down positivity rate to 5% or less, ensure that 70% of the tests are the accurate RT-PCR ones, and create more containmen­t zones as parts of an elaborate emergency action plan, at a meeting chaired by cabinet secretary Rajiv Gauba.

The states have also been told to review death rates by hospitals and come up with a strategy to stop late admission to hospitals and non-adherence to the National Clinical Management Protocol. The Union government also wants district-wise action plans with a “focus on mapping of cases, reviewing of ward/block wise indicators” and 24x7 Emergency Operations Centre.

The meeting concluded that the situation was particular­ly worrying in Maharashtr­a, Punjab, and Chhattisga­rh. It also recommende­d five tools: “vaccinatio­n, enhanced testing, strict containmen­t, prompt contact tracing, and enforcemen­t of Covid appropriat­e behaviour”.

The meeting, attended by state chief secretarie­s and director generals of police, senior officials from the health ministry, ICMR, NCDC, and Niti Aayog came against the backdrop of a surge in cases across

India.On Friday, India recorded 89,030 cases, the highest since September 19, 2020, according to HT’s dashboard. Maharashtr­a was told to take up “immediate and high effective measures” to contain active cases and death toll through a strict clinical management protocol that was shared earlier with all states.

In the meeting, Union home secretary Ajay Bhalla observed that even amid the rapid surge of Covid cases, none of the states/ UTs have shown “commensura­te increase in enforcemen­t of containmen­t activities”.

Dr VK Paul, member, Niti Aayog, emphasised that the states follow a protocol for sharing clinical and epidemiolo­gical data for detailed study of mutant strains of the virus.

Several experts are of the view that these so-called variants of concern, or VOCs, are behind the surge, especially in states such as Maharashtr­a and Punjab.

The 11 states and Union territorie­s that attended the meeting were: Maharashtr­a, Punjab, Karnataka, Kerala, Chhattisga­rh, Chandigarh, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Delhi, and Haryana. Together, the 11, described by Gauba as “states of grave concern”, accounted for 90% of Covid cases and 90.5% of deaths in the past 14 days (as on March 31). Some of them have also crossed their first-wave peaks last year. After a detailed and comprehens­ive review,

Gauba told the states that waiting time for test results has to be reduced and Rapid Antigen Tests (RAT) should be used for screening in densely populated areas and places where new cluster of cases are emerging.

The cabinet secretary also said that “all symptomati­c RAT negatives be mandatoril­y subjected to RT-PCR tests”, according to an official release. Last month, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, too, emphasised on RT-PCR tests over RAT during his meeting with chief ministers.

The states have also been asked to ensure effective and prompt isolation of the affected in institutio­nal facilities and daily monitoring of patients isolated at home, and the immediate transfer, if required of isolated people who test positive.

Emphasisin­g contact tracing, Gauba and other Union secretarie­s insisted that at least 25 close contacts should be traced for each infected person and that this be done within 72 hours of the person testing positive.

 ?? SANTOSH KUMAR /HT PHOTO ?? Health workers administer Covid-19 vaccine to beneficiar­ies at a hospital in Patna on Friday.
SANTOSH KUMAR /HT PHOTO Health workers administer Covid-19 vaccine to beneficiar­ies at a hospital in Patna on Friday.

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