Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

Target fest returnees for Covid tests, BMC tells staff

- Jyoti Shelar

MUMBAI: As Covid-19 cases continue to soar in some regions of Maharashtr­a, the civic body has sent out special instructio­ns to target people returning to the city after travelling for the Ganesh festival. The Brihanmumb­ai Municipal Corporatio­n (BMC) fears that the number of infections may increase with the inflow of people and this testing strategy aims at combatting the spread.

The state’s weekly positivity rate as of September 14 stood at 2.6%. Mumbai had a much lower positivity rate at 1.3%. However, some districts like Pune (5.8%), Ahmednagar (5.5%), Sangli (3.8%), Nashik (3.7%), Satara (3.5%), Osmanabad (3.2%), Palghar (3.1%) and Sindhudurg (3%) have higher positivity rate compared to the states average.

“Many people travel to their villages or hometown for the Ganesh festival and any such travel can lead to a spurt in the city’s Covid-19 infections,” said additional municipal commission­er Suresh Kakani. “We have therefore asked our field staff to target people with travel history for testing in order the catch the infections early,” he said.

Kakani said that the civic body is also setting up testing camps in localities. Healthcare workers are going door-to-door asking people who have returned after travelling to come and get tested. Emphasis is put on those who have the slightest of symptoms or those who have come in contact when someone who has tested positive.

The daily caseload in Mumbai has been under 500 for the past two months, crossing the 500mark in a few days. The state’s daily caseload has been fluctuatin­g between 3,000 to 4,000 over the past fortnight. Health officials have predicted the possibilit­y of a surge with the lockdown restrictio­ns eased and excessive travel between districts.

“Screening at the points of entry into the city and targetted testing of people with travel history is a good idea,” said Soumitra Ghosh, associate professor at the Centre for Health Policy, planning and management, Tata Institute of Social Sciences.

“Another important interventi­on should be to target areas that are reporting more cases,” he said.

Most recently, the civic body tweaked its testing policy and asked all the wards to test symptomati­c individual­s and highrisk contacts within the first or second day itself, instead of waiting for the fifth or sixth day as mandated earlier. The civic body has now asked the wards to do a follow-up test on the fifth or sixth day in case the first one is negative. “Our circular issued about 10-days ago stated that individual­s should be tested immediatel­y, and one must not wait till the symptoms are more pronounced or for the symptoms to arise,” said Kakani.

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